Treasury excitement after IMF thumbs-up for UK austerity
The IMF’s annual MOT on the British economy concludes that the coalition’s austerity policies are justified – which has set Treasury officials leaping around like excited pixies.
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We speak to Stephen Barclay, who’s Chief Secretary to the Treasury
Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Steve Barclay
We speak to the economic secretary to the treasury, John Glen – and ask him where all the money handed out in the budget was going to come from.
This week, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sajid Javid resigned.
We’re joined from Hertfordshire by the former Conservative cabinet minister, David Gauke, who served in the Treasury for seven years.
Earlier I spoke to the Prime Minister on behalf of all UK broadcasters. I began by asking if his chief advisor Dominic Cummings – who once described HS2 as a disaster zone – was wrong about it?
Labour’s Anneliese Dodds, the Shadow Treasury Minister.
Treasury Chief Secretary Liz Truss explains why she still supports the option of no deal.
Chair of the Transport Select Committee, Labour MP Lilian Greenwood, discusses the East Coast Mail Line.
The Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg has criticised Treasury officials again, this time accusing them of fiddling the figures on Brexit to keep Britain in the single market.
The government says families will lose out to the tune of £4,300 if they vote to leave the EU. Is it true?
The IMF’s annual MOT on the British economy concludes that the coalition’s austerity policies are justified – which has set Treasury officials leaping around like excited pixies.
An investigation into the scandal at Co-operative Bank will delve into the appointment of Paul Flowers as chairman, and look at the role of the government and regulators.
The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats hand £520,000 to the Treasury after a political spat over whether the late Joan Edwards’s donation was intended for government or party use.
Have Treasury civil servants been sending coded warnings that public sector cuts might be getting out of hand? The IFS thinks so, blogs Political Editor Gary Gibbon.