Sorry kids, you are still too young to vote
The stakes are too high to hand 16-year-olds the power to decide the country’s future, as Labour proposes
![young voters](https://cdn.statically.io/img/www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/business/2024/07/04/TELEMMGLPICT000379302896_17201095752220_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqRo0U4xU-30oDveS4pXV-Vv4Xpit_DMGvdp2n7FDd82k.jpeg?imwidth=350)
The stakes are too high to hand 16-year-olds the power to decide the country’s future, as Labour proposes
If Threadneedle Street fails to deliver soon Britain’s recovery risks being snuffed out
Bank of England risks missing the boat as Europe turns a corner
It is increasingly clear that the party will leave Britain labouring under a mountain of debt
There is a very real risk interest rates will be held higher for longer than is necessary
Unfortunately, Sunak is struggling to get any credit for delivering on his pledge
Predictable forecasts around Britain’s stagnation are a sideshow to Washington’s reckless largesse
Suggestions that leaving the EU contributed a big hit to inflation are becoming increasingly flimsy
Bad data undermines confidence – it is worth investing a little more to get them right
We need more people willing to challenge the economic orthodoxy
Expansion of the policy would fail every hard-evidence test on what benefits it brings
Business-friendly policies across the Channel stand in stark contrast to our cynical approach
The Horizon programme is another example of the bloc needing us more than we need it
Policymakers use the greedflation narrative to deflect attention from their own failures
Threadneedle Street’s delayed reactions and poor communication continue to drag on
Britain boasts a resilient services sector in spite of many doomsday predictions