Home
  • About
  • Richard Murphy
  • The Tax Research Wiki
  • Publications
  • Policies
  • Donations

Richard Murphy on tax, accounting and political economy

17
The deficit narrative: understanding is the key to successfully reframing it

Posted on August 16 2015

I have argued for longer than I probably care to remember that the last thing we need in our economy right now is a balanced
Read the full article…

35
PQE, gilts and the cost of borrowing

Posted on August 16 2015

Several questions have been asked about whether or not People’s Quantitative Easing funding imposes a cost on the Bank of England because it is paid for with
Read the full article…

23
The ignoring and the laughing are over: the fight’s now on

Posted on August 16 2015

A commentator on the blog wrote this morning: Richard, I think you need to recognise that a massive change has taken place over the last
Read the full article…

13
Why a left of centre government would be good for small business

Posted on August 16 2015

I note the Guardian reports this morning that: Jeremy Corbyn has launched an audacious bid to defeat his rivals by pledging pro-business reforms to back
Read the full article…

  • Richard Murphy

    Read more about me

  • Support Tax Research

    Loading…
  • Subscribe by Email

    If you enjoyed this blog, please subscribe free by email.

  • Follow me on Twitter

    Tweets by @RichardJMurphy



    web analytics


  • August 2015
    M T W T F S S
     12
    3456789
    10111213141516
    17181920212223
    24252627282930
    31  
    « Jul   Sep »
  • Categories

  • Archives

  • Search

  • Creative Commons License
    Tax Research UK Blog is written by Richard Murphy unless otherwise stated and published by ​Tax Research LLP under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.

    Design by Andy Moyle

    Tax Research UK Cookies Policy

    Our Website uses cookies to improve your experience. Please visit our Private: Data Protection & Cookie Policy page for more information about cookies and how we use them.

    Close