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The £2,000 Pension Salary Sacrifice Cap: Fairness or a Blow to Savings?
When the Chancellor announced a £2,000 annual cap on salary sacrifice into pensions, it appeared as a minor adjustment. However, it could significantly influence the UK’s pension incentive structure, potentially altering saving behaviour, workplace culture, and long‑term capital markets, which warrants closer examination. A fiscal grab framed as fairness? Sa
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Trevor Williams7mo agoT

UK Economic & Fiscal Outlook, November 2025 Budget: short-term relief v. long-term risk?
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Trevor Williams7mo agoGlobal imbalances, dollar dominance, and the political economy of savings
The modern international monetary system is built on a structural asymmetry that has persisted for decades: the United States runs large and continuous current-account deficits, while high-saving economies such as China, Japan, and Germany run persistent surpluses. But this is not the result of mercantilist policy choices or short-term political decisions; r
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Trevor Williams5mo agoT

Understanding the economic role of migration in developed countries
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Trevor Williams4mo agoT

Oil, gas and the UK: why this isn’t 2022, yet
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Trevor Williams2mo agoT

Blog: How right to buy damaged the UK housing market – and the wider economy
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Trevor Williams1mo agoT

El Niño: The global economic shock from the Pacific
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Trevor Williams1mo agoT

Football: It’s more than just a game it’s a successful global business
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Trevor Williams1mo agoT

El Niño is associated with financial market shocks
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Trevor Williams1mo ago
