Economic growth (GDP), Economic policy, Economics, Politics, UK news, Health, Artificial intelligence (AI), Society, Technology Business | The Guardian
The markets haven’t imploded, sterling is solid, and there is no flight of investors. Given the circumstances, the only way is upLarry Elliott is the Guardian’s economics editorA Labour government that comes to power after a prolonged period of unbroken Conservative rule. A sense in the country that something has gone seriously wrong with the economy and that change is needed. A backdrop of rapid technological change. For 2024, read 1964. For Sir Keir Starmer, read Harold Wilson.Wilson came to power with a national plan to grow the economy by 25% by the end of the 1960s. Starmer has a national mission to make the UK the fastest growing economy in the G7. We’ve been here before, but there is a chance – no more than that – that things may turn out better for Starmer than they did for Wilson. Continue reading…
The markets haven’t imploded, sterling is solid, and there is no flight of investors. Given the circumstances, the only way is up
Larry Elliott is the Guardian’s economics editor
A Labour government that comes to power after a prolonged period of unbroken Conservative rule. A sense in the country that something has gone seriously wrong with the economy and that change is needed. A backdrop of rapid technological change. For 2024, read 1964. For Sir Keir Starmer, read Harold Wilson.
Wilson came to power with a national plan to grow the economy by 25% by the end of the 1960s. Starmer has a national mission to make the UK the fastest growing economy in the G7. We’ve been here before, but there is a chance – no more than that – that things may turn out better for Starmer than they did for Wilson.