Not exact matches
Mr Speaker, the Office for
Budget Responsibility has
today produced its latest economic forecast — and it is a measure of the constitutional achievement that it is taken for granted that our country's forecast is now produced independently of the Treasury.
He pitched it as a positive: «The central forecast we publish
today from the independent Office for
Budget Responsibility does not predict a recession here in Britain.»
However, while the pace of economic recovery has finally picked up, figures released by the Office for
Budget Responsibility (OBR)
today confirmed that overall Osborne has presided over the slowest economic recovery in British history.
Mr Osborne was met with similar criticism this morning when he told the BBC's
Today programme that Robert Chote, chairman of the Office of
Budget Responsibility (OBR) had agreed with his figures.
Today's autumn statement will likely see the Office of
Budget Responsibility (OBR) downgrade all its expectations for the British economy, while chancellor George Osborne tries to reassure us that his new initiatives will make everything better.
Today's autumn statement saw the chancellor reveal the Office of
Budget Responsibility's (OBR) forecasts for the year ahead.
But
today a senior member of the Office for
Budget Responsibility which advises George Osborne claimed it is «unlikely to have a huge impact on migration flows».
In
today's interview with the Observer however, Treasury secretary Danny Alexander — whose Liberal Democrat party opposes Trident — rejected Fox's calls: «It is an MoD
responsibility in terms of
budgets.
Today's forecasts of what's going to happen to employment over the next five years according to the Office for
Budget Responsibility (OBR) shed more light on how the new coalition government's deficit - slicing plans will hit those working in the public sector, writes Neil MacDonald.