“The Chancellor is right to cut costs for families this summer, but the cost-of-living crisis demands much bolder action. The government needs to wage an all-out war on bills. “Ministers should show ...
IPPR has responded to today’s migration and asylum statistics from the Home Office and Office for National Statistics which reveal that: Net migration in the calendar year 2025 was 171,000, a fall ...
In terms of the political makeup of the parliament, arguably little has changed: the SNP still lack a majority but continue ...
“Headline inflation easing to 2.8 per cent is not expected to continue. The Iran conflict only began at the end of February, and higher oil and gas prices take time to feed through — the real impact ...
“Extreme weather is a growing political problem in the UK. As we’ve seen in Valencia, Los Angeles and elsewhere, when increasingly severe and frequent climate impacts strike, populists are quick to ...
New IPPR Scotland analysis of voting patterns shows the election campaign did little to inspire people in Scotland to go to the ballot box. The researchers suggest policies of progressive parties are ...
Rates of child poverty have tripled among families with two full-time working adults since 2000 Children of single parent families are twice as likely to fall into poverty and less likely to escape it ...
Rising parental employment in recent decades has not translated into improved financial security for many low-income families ...
In the UK today, 2.4 million households renting privately have unaffordable rents, an additional 250,000 since 2023. This is ...
Now that all the main parties have published their Holyrood 2026 election manifestos, we can assess how they perform against the five key tests we set out in a recent blog. The results are, to put it ...
Analysis of 22 countries reveals tax-funded healthcare systems are cheaper and have lower admin costs The best way to fix the NHS is change the way money is spent, not the funding model, says IPPR ...