The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) is an independent charity working towards a fairer, greener, and more prosperous society.
When it takes years before cases come to trial, 12 months or more to see a medical specialist, or 15 hours to be seen at A&E – it’s no exaggeration to ...
Interim executive director Harry Quilter-Pinner reacts to the Budget with Jacob Rees Mogg on GB News ...
The Office for Budgetary Responsibility has outlined a new approach to modelling the growth impacts of public investment. Unlike before, this allows them to better reflect the economic benefits of ...
Measures to boost public investment in today’s budget reverse planned cuts and mean the Starmer government is forecast to deliver the highest average level of public investment of any prime minister ...
IPPR North has reacted to Rachel Reeves’ first Budget as Chancellor of the Exchequer. Zoë Billingham, Director of IPPR North said: “Today the Chancellor has made some wise calls and shown a new ...
The additional funding to Scotland will not resolve all the funding challenges but will boost health and education, IPPR Scotland says. "The previous UK government left behind an ailing economy, ...
The Government will have to continue ramping up investment and make our tax system fairer over the rest of the parliament, following today's budget, says IPPR. Reacting to measures announced by Rachel ...
The independent Lord Darzi Review aims to examine the state of quality in health and care services on the NHS’s 70th birthday and make recommendations for future funding and reform of the system.
In this paper we trace the emergence of a poorly understood social challenge and one which symbolises Britain’s broken ‘social settlement’: the continued rise in working poverty since the beginning of ...
An insight into why we might privilege social justice, over criminal justice Prison does not only impact and harm those who are directly locked up; prisons affect all of us. Yet many of us don’t ...