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The Blog

Red referendum – Miliband should promise one too

13 May 2013

After a week of Tory grandees past and present declaring their willingness to take Britain out of the European Union, Ed Miliband has had an easy ride. The Labour leader has enjoyed the discomfort that the Conservative civil war is causing his opposite number, and will deride the upcoming protest vote against the Queen’s Speech… [Read More]


Serbia and Kosovo normalise relations in historic agreement

10 May 2013

Serbia and Kosovo have normalised relations in what has been hailed as an historic moment for the two Balkan States. After ten rounds of talks with High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs Catherine Ashton, often up to 14 hours at a time, Serbia’s Prime Minister Ivica Dacic and Kosovan Prime Minister Hashim Thaci… [Read More]


An end to grade inflation

9 May 2013

Publishing specimen exam scripts would quickly show what standarsd GCSE candidates really achieved and quickly put an end to grade inflation or to complaints about it.


Thumbs up: the coalition is learning from US industrial policy

8 May 2013

Since the Wealth of Nations project here at Civitas began, we have been calling on the government to pursue an active industrial policy. Up until recently, industrial policy has had a bad name, being associated with the (partially) failed efforts of the 1970s. Yet, the most outstanding examples of industrial policy measures are often not… [Read More]


As Ukip surges, coalition health policy shifts

7 May 2013

Much ink has already been expended on last Thursday’s local elections and the strong performance by UKIP. Achieving a projected national share of 23% of the vote (though not literally 23% of the vote cast on Thursday, as Anthony Wells has explained), UKIP netted 147 new council seats across England and also helped make it… [Read More]


Lord Lawson is right – the EU costs too much to stay

Today the former Chancellor, Nigel Lawson, announced his intention to vote out of Europe ( full text [£]). His analysis ranged from the military to the political, but he was most accurate regarding the current economic costs. This stands in contrast to the errors espoused by former Defence and Foreign Secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind on… [Read More]


Political scandal in Bulgaria could affect elections

3 May 2013

Bulgaria’s wiretapping scandal, dubbed as the country’s ‘Watergate’ is a messy criss-crossing of accusations and leaked wiretaps. Former agricultural minister Naydenov has accused ex-interior minister Tsetanov of illegally wiretapping politicians in the previous Cabinet. Tsetanov, often referred to as former Prime Minister Boyko Borisov’s right-hand man, denies any wrongdoing and has blamed the Socialist opposition… [Read More]


Another German lesson: the benefits of an exchange rate target

1 May 2013

Yesterday we published An Exchange Rate Target: Why we need one, by entrepreneur and economist John Mills. He argues that the government should set an exchange rate target to lower the value of the pound to help exporters. Some may see this idea as untested and radical, a big jump into the unknown. This is… [Read More]


NHS 111: lessons to learn

30 April 2013

A developing story in health in recent weeks has been the issues with the government’s rollout of NHS 111, a new non-emergency triage telephone service designed to combine NHS Direct and local out-of-hours services, since its initial ‘soft-launch’ in the run up to April 1st. The idea is that by combining these services and equipping… [Read More]


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