Press releases

List of press Articles

  1. Government could be targeting phantom students in bid to reduce net migration – IPPR

    ew analysis shows Home Office restrictions may be aimed at forcing out international students who don’t exist, while also hitting university income and doing real damage to local economies
  2. IPPR response to TUC research on ill-health at work - expansion of Fit for Work needed to help those in smaller businesses

    esponse to new TUC analysis showing ill-health or disability is forcing one-in-eight people to stop working before they reach pension age.
  3. Being mean-spirited on citizenship could hit the NHS and cost UK plc

    PPR calls on new Home Secretary Amber Rudd to reform citizenship rules to stop a post-Brexit brain-drain harming the economy.
  4. May can’t take back control if she remains wedded to a blunt and ineffective net migration target – IPPR

    he Government can only meet public demands to ‘take back control’ of immigration if it ditches its counter-productive net migration target and adopts a strategic approach fit for our modern economy, IPPR warn today.
  5. Collapse in holiday work hitting young people’s chances in job market - IPPR

    ew analysis shows young people want to work and get the skills they need – but government, business, schools and universities need to do more to give them that chance
  6. New apprenticeship programme needs to go further to benefit young people - IPPR

    oung people lose out twice: over 25s get more places and many apprenticeships are poor quality
  7. Transport Secretary urged to close £1,600 per person London-North spending gap

  8. North East shaking off ‘low skills’ history

  9. Devolving Work Programme to mayors could unlock £9,000 per claimant

  10. IPPR says Chancellor should set out plans on investment and tax following his fiscal reset comments

  11. Employment stats - IPPR say quick action needed to limit potential Brexit vote damage

  12. Inflation stats - a Brexit surge would hit poorest households twice as hard as the richest