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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Universal Basic Income or Universal Basic Services?

New Economics Foundation
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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Universal Basic Income or Universal Basic Services?
Universal basic income is now one of the most fashionable concepts in progressive politics. With automation increasing and wages stagnating, the theory is that giving everyone a set amount of money each year will liberate them to do what they want with their lives – and keep them out of poverty. But some people think universal basic income is an utopian impossibility. Others think it’s dangerous. So there’s a proposal for another solution: universal basic services. Instead of giving people money, why not guarantee all of the public services they need to live a full life? Ayeisha Thomas-Smith explores the two ideas with Barb Jacobson, Co-ordinator of Basic Income UK, and Anna Coote, New Economics Foundation Principal Fellow.
Guests:

Ayeisha Thomas-Smith, Barb Jacobson, Anna Coote


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Can we bring down house prices without crashing the economy?

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Can we bring down house prices without crashing the economy?
It’s one of the biggest contradictions in British politics. Across the country, baby boomers who own a house cheer as the value of their property rises. Meanwhile their millennial children watch on in horror, as owning their own home increasingly falls out of their reach. Politicians talk about building more homes but very few of them talk about directly reducing house prices. If house prices are too high for people to be able to buy houses, how can we bring them down? And can we do it without upsetting homeowners and crashing the economy? Ayeisha Thomas-Smith is joined by Joe Beswick, who leads on housing for the New Economics Foundation, and housing campaigner Beth Stratford, a PhD researcher at the University of Leeds.
Guests:

Ayeisha Thomas-Smith, Joe Beswick, Beth Stratford


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Why are university lecturers on strike?

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Why are university lecturers on strike?
Universities up and down the country have been shutting down as lecturers have walked out, arguing that the changes to their pension schemes could leave them thousands of pounds a year worse off in retirement. So this week we’re breaking down what the university strikes are all about, and what they tell us about everyone else’s pensions too. Ayeisha Thomas-Smith speaks to two striking lecturers: Nadine El-Enany, co-director of the Centre for Research on Race and Law at Birkbeck, and SOAS Senate chair Meera Sabaratnam. They are joined by writer and researcher Christine Berry, who is also a postgraduate student at Sheffield University.
Guests:

Ayeisha Thomas-Smith, Nadine El-Enany, Meera Sabaratnam, Christine Berry


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: What happened to the stock markets? (And does it matter?)

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: What happened to the stock markets? (And does it matter?)
There’s been a panic in the stock markets in recent weeks after the Dow Jones plunged more than 1000 points on a single Monday in the first week of February. When the stock market plunges should we all be worried? Or does it only affect those wealthy enough to be trading? This week, Ayeisha Thomas-Smith is joined by Frank van Lerven, NEF economist, and Anna Isaac, economics correspondent at The Telegraph.
Guests:

Ayeisha Thomas-Smith, Frank van Lerven, Anna Isaac


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Should We Start Counting The Work We Do For Free?

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Should We Start Counting The Work We Do For Free?
The New Economics Foundation -the independent think tank and charity campaigning for a fairer, sustainable economy- brought you a new podcast from the its archive. This week Polly Trenow from the Women Budget Group joins Kirsty Styles to discuss ways of measuring unpaid work.
Guests:

Polly Trenow, Kirsty Styles


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Is Sports Direct Changing Its Ways?

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Is Sports Direct Changing Its Ways?
New Economics Foundation discuss about how Sports Direct changed its business ways in this archive episode.

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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Power and Devolution

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Power and Devolution
Rachel Laurence and Annie Quick join Laurie Macfarlane to discuss inequality, democracy and the North/South divide in this episode of the New Economics Foundation podcast from the archive.
Guests:

Rachel Laurence, Annie Quick, Laurie Macfarlane


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Could personal debt cause another recession?

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Could personal debt cause another recession?
Personal debt is at record levels with one in six of us at risk of a debt crisis. Credit cards, overdrafts and payday loans are propping up households across the country as wages continue to fall in real terms. And many people are struggling under the pressure of paying back what they owe. But what is the effect on the wider economy? And what should we do about it? Ayeisha Thomas-Smith is back with us this week and is joined by Sarah Lyall, NEF’s Social Policy Lead and special guest Dr Jo Michell, Senior Lecturer in Economics at the University of the West of England.
Guests:

Sarah Lyall, Dr Jo Michell


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Will selling off public land make the housing crisis worse?

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Will selling off public land make the housing crisis worse?
The housing crisis is a hot topic at the moment. We often talk about who can buy, sell and rent houses – and how much they cost – but we rarely talk about the land beneath them. Lots of land in the UK is owned by the government and local authorities – public land. But a load of it is being sold off, from old hospitals to sites owned by the Ministry of Defence. The government says that we should sell it to developers to build houses on to deal with the housing shortage. But is that really happening? Is selling off our public land really helping to solve the housing crisis? This week host Ayeisha Thomas-Smith welcomes back NEF’s Subject Lead on Housing, Alice Martin, to talk us through these thorny questions. She’s joined by NEF researcher Duncan McCann and journalist and author Dawn Foster, both experts on the issues of housing and land.
Guests:

Alice Martin, Duncan McCann, Dawn Foster


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New Economics Foundation

NEF: Budget Special 2017

New Economics Foundation
Original Broadcast:

New Economics Foundation

NEF: Budget Special 2017
Chancellor Philip Hammond got out his red box again to let us know how the country’s finances are – or aren’t – holding up, and what the Government’s going to be doing with its money this year. Will the Chancellor’s proposals be enough to make our economy “fit for the future”? And with Brexit looming, is the Government doing enough to deal with the country’s economic problems? This week, NEF’s David Powell steps in for regular host Ayeisha Thomas-Smith. Dave is joined by Kate Bell, Head of Economic and Social Affairs at the Trades Union Congress, and Miatta Fahnbulleh, the new CEO of the New Economics Foundation.
Guests:

David Powell, Kate Bell, Miatta Fahnbulleh


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