Sentences with phrase «as ippr»

This has resulted in the exchange of idea with think tanks such as IPPR, Policy Exchange, Social Market Foundation, Reform, CentreForum, Demos and Civitas among others.
Farron's move in a letter to a constituent released at the weekend came as the IPPR thinktank published new research showing the proposed decarbonisation target need not increase energy prices, and the government's alternative of relying on gas will boost bills by as much as # 15.
As the IPPR has shown in its detailed tracking of attitudes, the felt asymmetry of the current devolution has become more and more salient over the last decade.
Today's English identity reflects a growing sense that English people lack a real voice on the things that matter to them, as the IPPR report that Sadiq refers to shows clearly.
As IPPR's new report into political inequality shows, less than half of 18 — 24 - year - olds voted, compared to nearly four - fifths of the over-65s, while three - quarters of «AB» individuals cast a ballot, against just over half of «DE» registered voters.

Not exact matches

Next week ippr begins the search for a new Director as we step down to pursue new challenges.
But the IPPR argues achieving full employment - which it defines as five per cent unemployment and an 80 % employment rate for the non-student working age population - could make a big difference to the UK.
Established think - tanks across the political spectrum such as the Fabian Society, ippr, Demos, Policy Exchange, the Social Market Foundation, Civitas and so on will make a point of stating who the funder of any piece of work or any event is.
The Labour leader, struggling with poor personal poll ratings, will be responding to a major report by the IPPR setting out as many as 30 radical measures to rebuild public faith in politics and public institutions in an era of austerity.
As Rick Muir, whose research at the IPPR think - tank has closely influenced Labour's policy development, puts it: «Instead of these budgets being salami - sliced at the centre, you pool the budget down to the local level and then they can make more rational sense of it.»
The IPPR also feels that unless a new, more credible model of globalisation is developed, the forces for protectionism will grow in the UK, as well as in the US.
All it does is summarise ideas from IPPR and academics such as Prabhakar (ideas which would be supported by Labour), and then claims unconvincingly that Conservatives would support this because it's «fair».
The IPPR has turned to the internet as a means of involving more people in politics.
IPPR chief economist Tony Dolphin commented: «As evidence has gathered of a sharp slowdown in UK economic growth over the last few months, the one bright spot has been the labour market.
The best indication that this is the case is the fact that, in the YouGov poll for the IPPR, for example, 96 % of Tory and 97 % of Labour voters are assumed to stick with their current parties as first preference.
Branded as too toxic for the Yes campaign, Nick Clegg had long been quiet on AV, until yesterday's speech at IPPR.
The IPPR think tank - which as recently as eleven months ago still believed that «AV is not the answer» - has commissioned a YouGov poll of its own, claiming there is a 12 - point lead for the Yes campaign just a day after the regular YouGov poll found a 7 - point lead for the No campaign.
The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) said ministers should change their mind and use the cash specifically for projects such as improving energy efficiency of homes, investing in low - carbon technologies and helping poorer countries cope with climate change.
This will be a much needed relief as predictions from IPPR suggest that that the decade from 2020 to 2030 will see «low growth, low interest rates» and «heavy stagnation» (IPPR, 2016), all of which will adversely affect household income.
The collaboration comes as a new report, published today by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), a think tank, claims teachers working in disadvantaged areas need advanced training to ensure the most in - need pupils get the best education.
Kiran Gill (pictured), an associate fellow at IPPR, said some schools felt they were pushed to exclude very challenging pupils because a lack of funding means councils are treating pupils as «OK» unless they were excluded.
As we saw, the IPPR and the Director of the UK's Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research — none of them sceptics — were warning back in 2006 that the climate change pudding had been over-egged, and was likely to damage the possibility of reaching the public.
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