Category: UK News

  • UK PM vows to embrace harsh light of fiscal reality

    UK PM vows to embrace harsh light of fiscal reality

    Starmer will defend Labour plans in speech and insist working people need better public services more than lower taxes…reports Asian Lite News

    Keir Starmer will promise to “embrace the harsh light of fiscal reality” on Monday as his chancellor prepares to unveil a budget that includes billions of pounds’ worth of tax rises and spending cuts.

    The prime minister will give a speech in the West Midlands defending Labour’s approach to the economy, as Rachel Reeves prepares to announce what she promises will be as momentous a budget as any in the party’s history.

    The chancellor will on Wednesday set out a major boost to capital spending, paid for by higher borrowing, a series of tax rises and an immediate squeeze on departmental budgets. With days to go until the announcement, senior Labour figures are concerned they will be punished by voters for raising national insurance contributions, having promised not to do so in their election manifesto.

    The prime minister will bat away such concerns in his speech on Monday, insisting that working people need better public services.

    Starmer will say: “It is working people who pay the price when their government fails to deliver economic stability. They’ve had enough of slow growth, stagnant living standards and crumbling public services.”

    He will add: “It’s time to choose a clear path, and embrace the harsh light of fiscal reality so we can come together behind a credible, long-term plan. It’s time we ran towards the tough decisions, because ignoring them set us on the path of decline. It’s time we ignored the populist chorus of easy answers … we’re never going back to that.”

    Starmer’s speech marks an attempt to head off criticism ahead of one of the most important weeks for his premiership so far. At the heart of the budget will be a major increase in national insurance contributions paid by employers. The chancellor is set to raise at least £8.5bn by raising those contributions, and will also reduce the threshold at which they are applied.

    That tax rise will be accompanied by a series of other rises that could also prove controversial. They include levying VAT on private schools, increasing capital gains tax on share sales and imposing inheritance tax on some agricultural property.

    The money will help close the £22bn gap in the public finances that Reeves says was left behind by the previous government. The chancellor has said she aims to raise another £18bn to improve public services, including funding a 4.5% annual increase in the NHS budget.

    Reeves will cut the day-to-day spending budgets for departments including the Ministry of Justice, the transport department and the housing department. In the longer term, the chancellor will change the government’s definition of debt to allow her to borrow an additional £50bn a year for capital investment by the end of the parliament. But in an effort to reassure the bond markets, she is set to limit herself to borrowing only £20bn-£25bn more than currently forecast.

    The extra money will help pay for an additional £1.4bn to repair school buildings, as well as two carbon capture and storage sites in the north of England, and a plan to regenerate Euston station and complete the high-speed rail link with Old Oak Common.

    It will not be used to pay for more freeports, despite Downing Street announcing last week that the chancellor would unveil five new sites in the budget. The Financial Times revealed on Sunday that the announcement had been a mistake and that the money would be used for previously announced sites instead. “It just was a total cock-up with the comms,” one official said.

    Ministers have spent much of the last week embroiled in a row over who should count as “working people”, given they promised not to raise taxes on working people in their manifesto. Last week Starmer said he used the term for people who earn money through work rather than from assets such as shares or property, though Downing Street later said people who owned small numbers of shares could count as working people.

    Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, told the BBC on Sunday: “Coming out of this budget, working people will not see higher taxes in the payslips that they receive. That is really important, because we know the pressures that people are under.”

    Starmer will on Monday attempt to recast that debate, saying: “We choose a different path: honest, responsible, long-term decisions in the interests of working people.”

    In an echo of the downbeat tone he struck in a speech in the Downing Street garden in August, he will add: “We have to be realistic about where we are as a country. This is not 1997, when the economy was decent but public services were on their knees. And it’s not 2010, where public services were strong but the public finances were weak. These are unprecedented circumstances.”

    Despite extensive efforts by Reeves and Starmer to prepare voters and the markets for the budget to come, some cabinet ministers are concerned about the impact of its measures on the party’s faltering poll ratings.

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  • Israel strikes military targets in Iran

    Israel strikes military targets in Iran

    Israel’s military described the attack as “precise strikes on military targets in Iran,” without immediately elaborating….reports Asian Lite New

    Israel launched airstrikes early Saturday targeting what it described as military targets in Iran in retaliation for a ballistic missile assault on October 1, officials said.

    There was no immediate information on damage in Iran.

    Israel’s military described the attack as “precise strikes on military targets in Iran,” without immediately elaborating.

    “The regime in Iran and its proxies in the region have been relentlessly attacking Israel since October 7 — on seven fronts — including direct attacks from Iranian soil,” an Israeli military statement said.

    “Like every other sovereign country in the world, the State of Israel has the right and the duty to respond.”

    In Tehran, the Iranian capital, the sound of explosions could be heard, with state-run media there initially acknowledging the blasts and saying some of the sounds came from air defence systems around the city.

    Meanwhile, state media in Syria described its air defences as targeting “hostile targets” there as well.

    Iran has launched two ballistic missile attacks on Israel in recent months amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip that began with the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

    Israel also has launched a ground invasion of Lebanon.

    The strike happened just as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was arriving back in the US after a tour of the Middle East where he and other US officials had warned Israel to tender a response that would not further escalate the conflict in the region and exclude nuclear sites in Iran.

    White House National Security Council spokesman Sean Savett said in a statement that “we understand that Israel is conducting targeted strikes against military targets in Iran” and referred reporters to the Israeli government for more details on their operation.

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  • ‘NHS owes so much to Indian diaspora’

    ‘NHS owes so much to Indian diaspora’

    “If I think about the way in which the NHS has been shaped in the last 76 years, we owe so much to the Indian diaspora here in Britain,” said Streeting.

    National Health Service (NHS) owes so much to the Indian diaspora and it is the partnership with India which will help the UK meet the challenges of modernising the country’s healthcare system for the future, Health Secretary Wes Streeting has said.

    As a keynote speaker at India Global Forum’s (IGF) annual Diwali celebration in London on Wednesday evening, Streeting drew upon the spirit of the Festival of Lights to express optimism towards the enormous reform agenda ahead for his department.

    “If I think about the way in which the NHS has been shaped in the last 76 years, we owe so much to the Indian diaspora here in Britain,” said Streeting.

    “It was the generation that helped to build the NHS in 1948 and today we see the children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren shaping its future. When we see such enormous challenges in our health and care service, when we look out to a very fragile and unstable world, it is very easy to feel overwhelmed by the challenge and beaten by the darkness. But Diwali is a great time to celebrate the triumph of light over that darkness,” he said.

    The Cabinet minister highlighted areas such as the “amazing” primary healthcare and research and innovation that is being designed and delivered in India, which the UK can learn from. He also referenced the India-UK vaccine partnership during the COVID pandemic as an example of how the bilateral partnership can be leveraged further in the healthcare sector.

    “The vaccines developed together by the University of Oxford and the Serum Institute of India are saving lives in some of the poorest parts of the world today…The UK-India partnership is absolutely crucial in meeting our challenges by learning from each other. The way in which primary care is being delivered (in India), we can really learn from at a time when people are struggling to get a GP appointment and the front door to the NHS in our communities is broken,” said Streeting.

    His Cabinet colleague, Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall, reiterated the Labour Party government’s “absolute commitment” to securing a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and Bilateral Investment Treaty with India.

    “This will build on an incredible trading relationship that is already worth over GBP 39 billion (annually) and supports over 700,000 jobs across our two great countries,” said Kendall.

    “The relationship we seek with India goes beyond trade alone. It really is a strategic partnership for economic security, for climate security and for global security,” she said.

    Earlier, the ministers interacted with entrepreneurs and senior executives from across sectors over high-level roundtable sessions at the IGF UK-India Future Forum, which covered areas such as technology, pharmaceuticals and green energy.

    “As we celebrate the first Diwali of a new Labour government in the UK, it is the perfect time to inject renewed vigour into one of our most impactful relationships,” said IGF Founder Manoj Ladwa.

    “India as the largest foreign investor in the UK indicates the depth and the breadth of our relations. It also indicates our ambition, our aspiration and our intent towards more substantive ties,” added Sujit Ghosh, Deputy High Commissioner of India to the UK.

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  • UK Govt to ban disposable vapes from June 2025 

    UK Govt to ban disposable vapes from June 2025 

    Defra said businesses would have until 1 June next year “to sell any remaining stock they hold and prepare for the ban coming into force”…reports Asian Lite News

    Disposable vapes will be banned from sale in England next summer, the government has confirmed. From June 2025 it will be illegal to sell single-use vapes, in a move designed to combat environmental damage and their widespread use by children.

    The legislation had been laid out in parliament, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs confirmed on Wednesday. The department said it had worked closely with devolved governments on the ban and would “align coming into force dates”.

    Defra said businesses would have until 1 June next year “to sell any remaining stock they hold and prepare for the ban coming into force”.

    The circular economy minister, Mary Creagh, said throwaway vapes were “extremely wasteful and blight our towns and cities”. She added: “That is why we are banning single-use vapes as we end this nation’s throwaway culture. This is the first step on the road to a circular economy, where we use resources for longer, reduce waste, accelerate the path to net zero and create thousands of jobs across the country.”

    The vaping lobby has argued that the bill will fuel parallel market sales of disposable vapes.

    John Dunne, the director general of the UK Vaping Industry Association, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Thursday: “One of the major concerns, at least with the last version of the bill that I saw prior to the new government coming in, [it] didn’t include, for instance, a ban on the importation of the products that they’re going to ban for sale. So in my view, that’s just going to fuel a black market.”

    Dunne said vapers would buy products online from overseas and that the parallel market in vapes was already one “that the authorities can’t really keep up with”. Rishi Sunak’s government tabled the legislation on the issue but it ran out of time in the previous parliament.

    The tobacco and vapes bill would prevent anyone born from 2009 from legally smoking by gradually raising the age at which tobacco can be bought. It also aimed to impose restrictions on the sale and marketing of vapes to children. Last year, it was estimated that almost 5m single-use vapes were either littered or thrown away in general waste every week in the UK – almost four times as much as the previous year.

    Defra said vape usage in England had grown by more than 400% between 2012 and 2023, with 9.1% of the British public now buying and using the products. The health minister Andrew Gwynne said: “It’s deeply worrying that a quarter of 11- to 15-year-olds used a vape last year and we know disposables are the product of choice for the majority of kids vaping today. Banning disposable vapes will not only protect the environment, but importantly reduce the appeal of vapes to children and keep them out of the hands of vulnerable young people.

    “The government will also introduce the tobacco and vapes bill – the biggest public health intervention in a generation – which will protect young people from becoming hooked on nicotine and pave the way for a smoke-free UK.”

    No 10 blocking outdoor smoking ban

    Downing Street is blocking moves to include a ban on smoking outdoors in the upcoming Tobacco and Vapes bill amid fierce opposition by the hospitality trade. No 10 officials privately believe that banning people from lighting up in pub gardens is “an unserious” policy and is not backed by good evidence showing that it harms non-smokers.

    Differences of opinion in government about an outdoor ban, and uncertainty about the potential risks of pressing ahead with it, lie behind the delayed publication of its long-promised landmark bill. It will make the UK the world’s first country to progressively raise the age at which people can buy tobacco until no one can do so legally.

    Keir Starmer has insisted that he is ready to face down critics of his drive to eradicate smoking because action is needed to reduce the 80,000 annual death toll from Britain’s biggest killer.

    But No 10 was said to be “spooked” by strongly worded warnings that job losses and pub closures will result if smoking in some outdoor settings is outlawed, despite the prime minister’s repeated insistence that “nanny state” jibes will not stop him taking robust action to improve public health.

    “It is an unserious policy. Nobody really believes smoking outdoors is a major health problem,” one Downing Street official said. The trade body UKHospitality said the ban threatens “serious economic harm to hospitality venues” and would hit nightclubs, hotels, cafes and restaurants as well as pubs.

    The British Beer and Pub Association said the plan was “deeply concerning and difficult to understand” and “yet another blow to the viability of our nation’s vital community assets”. Ending smokers’ ability to go outside a pub to have a cigarette, for example in a beer garden, “would have a devastating impact on pubs already struggling” with rising costs, it claimed.

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  • Shoplifting offences in England hits a new high

    Shoplifting offences in England hits a new high

    A total of 469,788 offences were logged by police forces in the year to June 2024, a 29% increase compared with the 365,173 recorded in the previous 12-month period…reports Asian Lite News

    Shoplifting offences reported by police in England and Wales have risen to a fresh 20-year high, according to official figures, as retailers continue to warn about violence against shop workers.

    A total of 469,788 offences were logged by police forces in the year to June 2024, a 29% increase compared with the 365,173 recorded in the previous 12-month period. This is the highest number of shoplifting offences seen, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), since records began in the year ending March 2003.

    Retailers have called for help to prevent and handle rising retail crime and the impact it has on their employees and businesses. The number of reported shoplifting offences had already risen to the highest levels in 20 years earlier this year, but the latest figures show they have continued to climb.

    The offence of theft from a person, as recorded by police, also rose by 20% in the 12 months to June, rising to 139,368 compared with 116,312 a year earlier. UK shop workers have been facing mounting incidents of violence and abuse as they battle to control shoplifting, according to retailers, including staff in some of the UK’s largest supermarkets.

    The rise in retail crime has coincided with a period of price inflation, as the cost of everyday food items, from eggs to baby formula, has soared, leaving many consumers struggling to make ends meet.

    However, the Co-op chain said that organised criminals were behind some of the recent increase in shoplifting and violence, rather than people who were stealing to survive. Paul Gerrard, the public affairs director at the Co-op, told the House of Lords justice and home affairs committee that much of the rise in retail crime that the grocery chain had experienced had been due to gangs stealing large amounts to order.

    In the king’s speech in July, the government moved to make attacking a shop worker a standalone criminal offence after pressure from the retail industry. Retailers have said they hope the new crime and policing bill will make it easier for police to investigate and prosecute criminals.

    Many shop staff have warned that they feel unsafe at work and are planning to quit working in retail, according to a survey which found that one in three retail workers faced weekly abuse from shoppers. The Retail Trust charity found that almost half of 1,200 workers they surveyed feared for their safety, while more than a third wanted to leave their jobs or the retail industry because of the rise in violence and abuse.

    Chris Brook-Carter, the charity’s chief executive, said: “The incidents we hear about every day are both horrifying and heartbreaking. People tell us they have been spat on, had products smashed up in front of them and been filmed on their phones by abusive shoppers who then threaten to post the footage on social media.”

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  • Duncan criticizes Jenrick’s stance on Palestine

    Duncan criticizes Jenrick’s stance on Palestine

    Alan Duncan was speaking in a video interview with Palestinian journalist Ahmed Alnaouq, which was published on Thursday by Palestine Deep Dive…reports Asian Lite News

    A former minister of state has condemned the Conservative Party leadership hopeful Robert Jenrick, calling him an “extremist” and warning that his position on Israel and Palestine would make him a “disaster” as leader of the party.

    Alan Duncan was speaking in a video interview with Palestinian journalist Ahmed Alnaouq, which was published on Thursday by Palestine Deep Dive.

    During the interview, Duncan highlighted Jenrick’s controversial statements at the Conservative Party conference earlier this month, where Jenrick vowed to build the British Embassy in Jerusalem if the Foreign Office did not agree to relocate it.

    “This man is an extremist. He does not believe in any kind of two-state solution although he says he does, he knows nothing about it. He takes his script entirely from the Conservative Friends of Israel and the Israelis, so he would be a disaster if he were leader of the Conservative Party,” Duncan said.

    Duncan, who most recently served as UK minister of state for Europe and the Americas from 2016 to 2019 in the Conservative government of the time, also criticized the influence of lobbying organizations such as Conservative Friends of Israel, accusing them of shaping UK foreign policy on Israel.

    He described how donor money and back channels have influenced Conservative Party decisions, saying: “It goes straight into number 10 Downing Street” and “tells the Foreign Office what to do.”

    Duncan expressed skepticism about the Conservative government’s commitment to its official stance on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    While the UK’s stated policy views Israeli settlements as illegal and supports the establishment of a Palestinian state, Duncan claimed that senior Conservative officials did not genuinely believe in these policies.

    “They didn’t really believe in international law as far as I can see,” he added, accusing them of hypocrisy when it came to Israel.

    When asked about Kemi Badenoch, the other Conservative leadership contender, Duncan admitted that he was unsure of her stance on foreign policy. He lamented the lack of experience and understanding of the Middle East among UK politicians.

    “I haven’t got a clue what her views are on foreign policy, I simply do not know,” he said. “And it’s one of the problems of all British politics now is that those in Parliament have got no real experience of the region, they haven’t really learned the history and they just have very, very simple attitudes and this is dangerous.”

    Duncan’s scathing remarks underscored growing divisions within the Conservative Party over its approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as leadership hopefuls such as Jenrick adopt increasingly hard-line positions. He also took aim at former UK government minister Michael Gove.

    “Now one thing that was a disgrace was (Michael Gove) when he was minister, who is another completely sold-out sympathizer of Israeli extremism,” he said.

    “He passed a law which said that local councils were not allowed to have a policy of boycotting Israeli produce even if they’re illegal, so you end up with one arm of the UK government saying Palestinian settlements are illegal and another arm of British government protecting illegal activity in those Palestinian settlements, and Parliament was pathetic in opposing this piece of legislation.”

    Duncan also said that not enough value was placed on Palestinian lives by the British political class. “I don’t think people in Parliament are sitting there and thinking quite what the devastation of the Gaza Strip actually looks like and means to people in terms of human suffering,” he said.

    “They don’t even stop to think about it. Someone like Jenrick says: ‘Oh well, you know Hamas are dreadful, we’ve got to eliminate them,’ as if you can. I mean, he says nothing about the origins of this problem. So, he is a disgrace,” he said.

    The former minister also criticized the current Labour government’s lack of a genuine commitment to a two-state solution, dismissing the rhetoric from both major parties as “waffle” and a reflection of ignorance about the situation on the ground.

    Duncan’s candid remarks are likely to reignite debate about the UK’s foreign policy direction, particularly as the Conservative Party prepares to select its next leader.

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  • UK pledges more than $32m in aid for Lebanon

    UK pledges more than $32m in aid for Lebanon

    Minister for the Middle East Hamish Nicholas Falconer delivered the UK’s position as the humanitarian crisis in Lebanon continues to worsen. ..reports Asian Lite News

    The government renewed its call for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah during the Lebanon Support Conference held in Paris on Thursday.

    Minister for the Middle East Hamish Nicholas Falconer delivered the UK’s position as the humanitarian crisis in Lebanon continues to worsen. “The situation in Lebanon is worsening daily, and civilian casualties are mounting,” Falconer said, highlighting the importance of swift action. “The risks of further escalation cannot be overstated. We cannot let Lebanon become another Gaza.”

    Falconer reaffirmed the UK’s support for Israel’s right to self-defense, citing Hezbollah’s rocket attacks on northern Israel as the origin of the conflict. “Let us not forget that this conflict started when Hezbollah launched rockets at northern Israel, forcing the Israelis to flee their homes,” he added.

    The minister also called on Iran to halt its involvement in the region, urging Tehran to “immediately halt those attacks, and stand down its proxies.” The UK pledged £15 million ($19.4 million) to support Lebanon’s humanitarian needs, including food, medicine and clean water, with an additional £10 million to match public donations made through the Disasters Emergency Committee appeal for Gaza, Lebanon and the wider region.

    “We are working with the Lebanese Armed Forces, the sole legitimate defender of that state, to support security and stability,” Falconer said. He was accompanied by Air Marshal Harvey Smyth, a senior UK military officer leading efforts to support Lebanon’s defense forces. Smyth added that British forces stand “ready to do more.”

    The government also called for the protection of aid workers, particularly those working with the UN, and condemned threats to the safety of UN peacekeepers in the region. “The aid workers striving to alleviate suffering in Lebanon must be able to carry out their duties in safety — including UN workers, who have a vital role to play in resolving armed conflict and mitigating its impact,” Falconer said.

    He also reiterated the UK’s stance on a political resolution to the conflict, calling for a solution in line with UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which aims to secure long-term peace on both sides of the Israel-Lebanon border. “A political solution (consistent with 1701) is the only answer — and the only way to secure a stable future for those on both sides of the Blue Line,” he said.

    PM unlikely to meet Harris before US election

    Keir Starmer’s hopes of meeting Kamala Harris before the US presidential election have faded, Downing Street has said. The prime minister said last month he aimed to meet both presidential candidates before American voters go to the polls on 5 November.

    He told reporters who had travelled with him to New York that it would be “very good to meet both [Trump and Harris] at some stage” before the US election. “We’ll just have to see what’s possible,” he said.

    Starmer did secure a meeting with Donald Trump while in New York for the UN general assembly in September. He and the former US president had a two-hour dinner, where they were joined by David Lammy, the foreign secretary. A government source said on Thursday that hopes of arranging a meeting between Starmer and Harris had faded. “We’re obviously a number of days out from the campaign and I suspect both candidates are focused on the election,” they said.

    With less than two weeks to go before the poll, Harris and Trump are touring battleground states. Trump has sought to weaponise the links between Labour and the Democratic party in the final stages of the campaign.

    In a strongly worded legal complaint filed on Wednesday night, Trump’s campaign accused the “far-left” Labour party of “blatant foreign interference” in the US election. The letter claimed that volunteering efforts by Labour officials travelling to the US to support Harris and reports of contact between Labour figures and officials on her campaign amounted to “illegal foreign national contributions”.

    Downing Street has said any Labour officials who campaign for Harris in the election were doing so as volunteers and were not being reimbursed by the party. Starmer said he had a “good relationship” with Trump that would not be jeopardised by the complaint.

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  • UK PM hints at tax rises on people with income from assets

    UK PM hints at tax rises on people with income from assets

    Ministers are expected to announce increases in inheritance tax and capital gains tax (CGT) in the budget next week…reports Asian Lite News

    Keir Starmer has hinted at tax rises for those who earn their income from shares and property, saying that they did not fit his definition of “working people”.

    Ministers are expected to announce increases in inheritance tax and capital gains tax (CGT) in the budget next week.

    Ahead of the anticipated tax rises, the government has come under pressure to clarify its manifesto promise to “not increase taxes on working people”.

    Asked whether someone who works but also earns income from assets, such as shares and property, was a working person, Starmer told Sky News: “Well, they wouldn’t come within my definition.”

    The prime minister’s spokesperson later clarified that he was referring to people who “primarily get their income from assets” and was “not precluding people that have a small amount of savings” in stocks and shares.

    Pressed on whether that meant taxes for these people could go up, Starmer told Sky News: “You can probably give me any number of examples … you’re asking me for a definition of who’s a working person, and then you’re making assumptions about what that tax might be in relation to.”

    The debate over the definition of working people has intensified after ministers refused to rule out raising national insurance on employers in the budget. Starmer was asked to set out his definition of working people by reporters travelling with him for the Commonwealth summit in Samoa: “I have in mind people who go out earn their living, may have some savings, but don’t have the ability to sort of routinely write a big check if they get into difficulties.

    “They’re the people uppermost in my mind when we’re making our decisions,” he added. Starmer and Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, have both warned that they will need to make “tough decisions” in the budget.

    Starmer has indicated that CGT on the sale of shares and other assets, currently set at up to 20%, will increase. The tax is expected to rise by several percentage points.

    However, ministers are expected to leave CGT on the sale of property untouched because of concerns that increasing it would cost money by slowing down sales. The Conservatives cut the top rate of CGT for property from 28% to 24% in the last budget.

    Reeves is also looking at tightening the rules for inheritance and gift tax. Only about one in 20 UK estates now attract inheritance tax.

    Meanwhile, the government’s borrowing costs have risen on global financial markets amid expectations that Rachel Reeves will change Britain’s debt rules to unlock up to £50bn of additional headroom for investment in infrastructure.

    Ahead of next week’s budget, it was revealed on Wednesday that the chancellor was preparing to confirm at the International Monetary Fund’s annual meetings in Washington that she would change the way the debt rule is calculated.

    The yield – in effect the interest rate – on UK government bonds rose by about six basis points to trade above 4.2% in early trading on Thursday morning before easing, contrasting with a fall in borrowing costs for other comparable countries, including the US. The spread between gilts and German debt rose to the highest in more than a year, according to Bloomberg.

    “It seems to be related to Reeves last night suggesting that the fiscal rules would be rewritten to increase spending on infrastructure,” Lyn Graham-Taylor, a senior rates strategist at Rabobank said.

    The measure – which is a broader definition of the government debt, including financial assets and liabilities – would have added £53bn to headroom within the fiscal rules if it had been applied at the last budget in March.

    Reeves is expected to attend the IMF meetings on Thursday. Using the visit to Washington to announce the fiscal rule change will signal that Reeves is aligned with the traditionally conservative institution, which has gradually moved to support borrowing for investment in recent years.

    Global bond yields have come under pressure in recent months amid expectations that cooling inflation will lead the world’s most powerful central banks to cut interest rates to avoid an economic hard landing.

    Andrew Bailey, the Bank of England governor, suggested UK inflation was falling by more than expected, despite cautioning that there were still “outstanding questions” about whether price pressures would remain stubborn.

    In comments appearing to hint that the Bank could further reduce borrowing costs at its next policy meeting in November, Bailey told a meeting at the IMF that there had been “good news” on inflation across advanced economies.

    “Disinflation – and the UK is part of this – has actually taken place faster than we expected it to,” he said.

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  • PM to face heat over reparations

    PM to face heat over reparations

    Eric Phillips, of CARICOM’S commission to seek reparations from former colonial powers such as Britain, France and Portugal, said he did not understand the relevance of the Commonwealth if Starmer “takes a cruel approach”…reports Asian Lite News

    The leaders of the Commonwealth grouping of nations met on Thursday ahead of a summit in the South Pacific nation of Samoa that will feature talks on climate change and the question of reparations for Britain’s role in transatlantic slavery.

    King Charles, the head of the grouping, is among the representatives of 56 countries, most with roots in Britain’s empire, who are attending the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) that began on Monday.

    More than half of the Commonwealth’s members are small nations, many of them low-lying islands at risk from rising sea levels caused by climate change.

    Among them is Tuvalu, whose climate change minister, Maina Vakafua Talia, urged the grouping to strive for the Paris Accord’s warming goal of 1.5 degrees C (2.7 degrees F), calling new fossil fuel projects a “death sentence” for his country.

    “We call on our wealthier partners to align themselves with this goal and not fan the flames of the climate crisis with fossil fuel expansion,” he said.

    Island leaders are expected to issue a declaration on ocean protection at the summit, with climate change being a central topic of discussion.

    “Climate change is an existential threat,” Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong told a press conference after a meeting with counterparts. “It is the No. 1 national security threat. It is the No. 1 economic threat to the peoples of the Pacific and to many members of the Commonwealth.”

    Zambia was among the African countries that warned of the rising impacts of climate change, including the effects on food security, she added.

    On Thursday, Charles will be shown the impact of rising sea levels that are forcing people to move inland, a Samoan chief said.

    Ocean temperatures are rising in the Pacific Islands at three times the global rate, Antonio Guterres, thesecretary-general of the United Nations, has said, leaving their people “uniquely exposed” to the impact of rising sea levels.

    Samoan Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata’afa welcomed the assembled leaders at a banquet, among them Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, wearing a colourful “bula” shirt, while his British counterpart, Keir Starmer, wore a dark suit.

    Also on the agenda is a push for Britain to pay reparations or make other amends for transatlantic slavery, a long-standing demand that has recently gained momentum worldwide, particularly among the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and the African Union.

    On Monday, Starmer said Britain would not bring the issue of reparations for slavery to the table at the summit and would not apologise, but was open to engage with leaders who want to discuss it.

    He wanted to “look forward rather than looking backwards”, he told reporters.

    But a CARICOM source familiar with the matter said CHOGM presented an “important opportunity” for dialogue on reparations and the region, which groups countries such as Barbados and Jamaica, would be raising the issue there.

    Eric Phillips, of CARICOM’S commission to seek reparations from former colonial powers such as Britain, France and Portugal, said he did not understand the relevance of the Commonwealth if Starmer “takes this cruel approach”.

    Discussions were taking place “behind the scenes” in Samoa, however, said Kingsley Abbott, director of London University’s Institute of Commonwealth Studies, who is attending the summit.

    There were paragraphs in the summit’s draft conclusion calling for a discussion on reparations, Bahamas Foreign Minister Frederick Mitchell told the BBC, adding, “CARICOM countries want the conversation to start.” Opponents of reparations payments say countries should not be held responsible for historical wrongs, while those in favour say the legacy of slavery has led to vast and persistent racial inequality today.

    “Whenever those affected by atrocities ask to talk, there should always be a willingness to sit down and listen,” Abbott said.

    From the 15th to the 19th century, at least 12.5 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly taken by European ships and merchants and sold into slavery.

    Those who survived the brutal voyages ended up toiling on plantations in inhumane conditions in the Americas, mostly in Brazil and the Caribbean, while others profited from their labour.

    As a series of Labour MPs called on the government to discuss reparations, chancellor Rachel Reeves was asked on a trip to Washington if Britain could afford to pay them. She replied: “No”.

    Starmer is expected to be pressed on the issue personally while in Samoa, after the prime minister of the Bahamas Philip Davis said he wanted a “frank talk” with the PM on the issue, while Fred Mitchell, his country’s foreign affairs minister, said it was “only a matter of time” before the Labour leader changed his position.

    At the summit, Starmer said that this generation should have a conversation about the history of slavery but said that the UK should be “forward looking” in its stance on reparations.

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  • EVENT: IIMK CONCLAVE IN LONDON

    EVENT: IIMK CONCLAVE IN LONDON

    Professor Debashis Chatterjee, Director of IIM Kozhikode, Kerala, India, shares his experience of hosting the institute’s first-ever international conclave on ‘Globalizing Indian Thought’ in London. “We aim to be remembered as a pioneering business school that takes Indian management principles to the world,” writes Prof. Chatterjee

    The next few decades belong to India and its economic and human capital prowess. At the Indian Institute of Management Kozhikode (IIMK), one of India’s premier business schools, we are making a significant international foray to explore why and how this global change is happening. As Director of the school, I’m proud to be coming to London for our first ever international conclave on ‘Globalizing Indian Thought’.

    The aim of our conclave revolves around India’s soft power outreach, with discussions exploring ancient Indian wisdom and its relevance in today’s globalised world. We aim to highlight how India’s management principles, deeply rooted in philosophy, leadership, and governance, can offer valuable lessons for global business and policymaking.

    One of the Labour party’s newest Members of Parliament, Kanishka Narayan MP, joined us, alongside Lord Meghnad Desai, Baroness Sandy Verma, Director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies Shaunaka Rishi Das, outgoing Director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research Jagjit Chadha and others.

    Shaunaka Rishi Das, Director, Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, giving the Opening Address

    We hope that the conference is the start of a conversation in London. Our initiative is based on the hallmark of IIM Kozhikode’s intellectual contributions, which are grounded in a belief that Indian management philosophies – derived from the teachings of ancient texts such as the Bhagavad Gita and Arthashastra – have much to offer in terms of leadership, ethics, and innovation.

    We are uniquely placed to initiate this conversation in London, home to the world’s oldest democracy.

    IIMK has always set the benchmark for other management programmes in the country – in terms of gender diversity, diversity of management programmes. We hope to be able to showcase this prowess during the event, particularly as we have more than a hundred alumni living and working in London now in senior positions, despite being such a new business school.

    Professor Debashis Chatterjee handing over a memento of appreciation to Shaunaka Rishi Das

    As early as 2013, our flagship management program was 54 per cent female. That was a defining time for other business schools, with the trend in India for women to make up a mere eight to ten per cent, before our initiative. IIMK should not be remembered just for being a highly ranked business school, but instead as a pioneering one.

    Too often, society mismeasures student aspirations: we think students are in higher education only to get a job. That will certainly be a ‘want’ in many cases, but not an aspiration. We don’t operate an employment exchange, but cater to the deeper aspects of student aspirations by providing them a portfolio of options for their future life once they leave our campus. Our Liberal Studies in Management is a way to get a chef or a national cricketer to come to join the campus. So we have stiff entry barriers but provide multiple exit options. 

    Panel discussion on “The Future of Higher Education and its Role in Addressing Global Challenges” with Prof. Kamran Razmdoost (Dean, ESCP Business School London), Prof. Kirstie Simpson (Dean, Chester Business School, University of Chester) and Prof. Catherine Robinson (Dean, School of Business and law, University of Brighton)

    The IIM journey, as we see it, is defined by intellectual capital multiplied by social capital, which gives a graduate his or her reputation capital. Our institution is one of the most credible voices to be talking such perspectives. In the Financial Times Masters in Management ranking in 2024, we leapt nine spots to be recognised as the 68th best in the world. As one of the fastest growing IIM’s in India we’re ranked third in the National Institutional Ranking Framework,. Despite being a comparatively new institution, we are able to bring new management and innovation thinking from India to the world.

    As global challenges become more complex, time-tested Indian ideas that provide unique perspectives on balancing material progress with human and ecological well-being, as well as our approach to diversity and building tomorrow’s leaders, has been on display during our Globalizing India Thought conference in London.

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