Embattled Chancellor Rachel Reeves jetted off to Davos last night as Britain recorded its biggest jobs slump since Covid. Ms Reeves headed for the Swiss mountain resort for the annual gathering of the World Economic Forum as it was claimed that the UK was ...
Chancellor Rachel Reeves inherited a bad economic hand from the Tories - but in her darkest moments, she has seen a string of fortunate breaks allowing her breathing space
That left Rachel Reeves, Britain’s chancellor, with an uphill task when she arrived at the Swiss alpine town to court investors at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. She met a raft of Wall Street bosses,
More than £60bn could be released from blue-chip company retirement schemes under proposals to be outlined by the chancellor this week, Sky News learns.
The Chancellor will declare that “growth won’t come without a fight” as she unveils her plan to turnaround Britain’s ailing economy with billions of pounds of investment and new infrastructure projects.
THE Budget tax raid on businesses has led companies to slash jobs at the fastest rate since the financial crisis, a survey shows. They are now cutting staff at the highest level since 2009, other
Plans to abolish non-dom status will be amended to allow a more generous phase out of tax benefits, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced. Reeves told an audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos that changes would be made to upcoming legislation to increase the generosity of a facility to help non-doms repatriate their funds to the UK.
The Conservatives says the Chancellor is ‘deeply out of her depth' and says she must immediately return to Britain.
When Santander boss Ana Botin met Rachel Reeves at the annual Davos jamboree last week, the atmosphere may have been frostier than the ski slopes outside. Just hours earlier, Botin had been forced to defend the bank’s commitment to Britain after reports that the Spanish lender was preparing to exit after 20 years because of over-regulation.
The Chancellor travelled to Davos to seek more investment in Britain at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting.
British finance minister Rachel Reeves spelled out her plans to revive the country's slow-moving economy on Wednesday, adding to recent pledges to reform investment and planning rules with a commitment to back airport expansion at Heathrow.
Rachel Reeves has bet her economic credentials on a commuter town boom in a hope it will spark growth in the UK. The chancellor is set to make a major announcement on planning reform amid questions about her own future in the Treasury and economic indicators putting Britain on the brink of a crisis.