ECONOMY FORUM: One of the biggest policy benefits from leaving the EU is the end of the ‘Brussels excuse’. No longer can British ministers blame the European Commission – often illegitimately – for tying its hands in dealing with Britain’s economic challenges. Now the buck clearly stops with a Boris Johnson-led government, which is also has the benefit of a large parliamentary majority. What do its early actions tell us about the new government’s approach to national economic policy? Phil Mullan and Rob Lyons discuss.
#PodcastOfIdeas: Battle of Ideas preview
#BattleCry: Professor Tim Ingold on evolutionary psychology
#BattleCry: Cathy Young on the rise of the alt-right
#BattleFest2015: From Islamic State to Oxford - a monumental war on the past?
#PodcastOfIdeas: Scaramucci, gender identity and the Brexit transitional phase
#PodcastOfIdeas: public-sector pay, Donald Trump and Emmanuel Macron
#PodcastOfIdeas: the Grenfell tragedy, the Finsbury Park attack and the DUP
#PodcastOfIdeas: further reflections on Election 2017
#PodcastOfIdeas: the morning after Election 2017
#PodcastOfIdeas: UK general election - episode 4
#PodcastOfIdeas: UK general election - episode 3
#PodcastOfIdeas: UK general election - episode 2
#PodcastOfIdeas: UK general election - episode 1
Book Launch: Phil Mullan’s Creative Destruction - how to start an economic renaissance
#BattleFest2016: Cosmopolitanism and sovereignty - what next for Europe?
#PodcastOfIdeas: What next for Brexit?
#BattleFest2016: Tax wars and inequality
#BattleFest2016: Who are we? Identity politics dissected
#BattleFest2016: Immigration - what is the future of free movement?
#PodcastOfIdeas: Does Britain need an industrial strategy?
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