Wales

Danny’s day out in Cardiff, by Alan Trench

Much has been made of Danny Alexander’s appearance in Wales yesterday before the National Assembly’s Finance Committee. What’s really interesting, though, is not the fact of the chief secretary to the Treasury’s visit or the ‘grilling’ he got from AMs, but what he appears to have had to say about reforming devolution’s financial arrangements. Read more...

Tags: | | | Comment

Devolution mismatch, by Alan Trench

The Spending Review is no longer at the forefront of the news, but it’s still worth thinking about. The spending plans it sets out and their implications will determine much of the political, economic and social life for the remainder of this Parliament. That’s as true for territorial matters as it is for any others. Read more...

Tags: | | | | | Comment

Devolution declaration, by Alan Trench

The devolved first ministers’ declaration about cuts (available here; the BBC News story is here) is rather interesting, even if there is less to it than meets the eye. Read more...

Tags: | | | | Comment

The reality of revaluation, by Malcolm Prowle

The coalition government’s decision to defer any council tax revaluation for the duration of this parliament comes as no surprise. Politicians meddle with existing taxation arrangements at their peril. Read more...

Tags: | | Comment

On devolution and data, by Alan Trench

Data is about the most unsexy topic in public policy debates. But it’s also vital; if we don’t have good quality, accurate data about key subjects, we can’t understand how they work, or what the problems are. It’s no accident that much of the work of pioneer social reformers like Seebohm Rowntree was to collect their own accurate, up-to-date data about social conditions. Read more...

Tags: | | Comment

Quango quandary, by Alan Trench

News of the UK Government’s plan to cut a number of quangos raises immediate devolution concerns.  I can’t pretend to understand how the UK Film Council relates to bodies promoting the film industry elsewhere, like the former Scottish Screen (now part of Creative Scotland); there may well be overlap and duplication, even if such bodies have different remits.  But two raise immediate concerns. Read more...

Tags: | | | 1 comment

Why right-to-buy is wrong, by Malcolm Prowle

The Conservative Government under Margaret Thatcher gave more than five million council house tenants in Britain the right to buy their homes. Council tenants who had lived in their home for up to three years were given a 33% discount on the market value of their home, increasing in stages up to 50% for a tenancy of 20 years. Read more...

Tags: | | Comment

Conservative radicalism in Wales, by Alan Trench

The Holtham Commission’s report, published on Tuesday, is a fascinating document.  It illustrates, vividly, an intriguing maxim of devolution in Wales (and the UK more generally): the conservatism of its radicalism.  For the third time now in recent Welsh history, an independent expert commission has looked at important aspects of how Welsh devolution works, and concluded that simply in order to make the underlying principles of the status quo operate properly, there needs to be very substantial changes.  In two of those cases – the Richard Commission in 2004, and Gerald Holtham’s Commission now – politicians have reacted with great caution. Read more...

Tags: | | | 1 comment

The price of coalition, by Colin Copus

So, the most worrying outcome of the general election for the English gets ever closer: six Scottish and three Welsh nationalist MPs propping up a Labour/Liberal Democrat coalition government. Read more...

Tags: | | 1 comment

It’s not big, but it can be clever, by Gill Morgan

Wales’s relatively small size is an advantage when it comes to joined-up working, which is now more essential than ever Read more...

Tags: | | Comment