Economics
-
Both sides have been guilty of negative tactics, from warning of economic disaster to focusing on the supposed threat posed by migrants
-
-
Democratic presumptive nominee Hillary Clinton picked apart Donald Trump’s economic plan and financial record on Tuesday
-
While UK voters have good reasons to either stay in or leave the European Union this Thursday, a British exit would only hurt the US
-
Central bankers from ECB and US Federal Reserve warn they are on high alert over outcome of vote, which still appears too close to call
-
Markets are still jittery ahead of Thursday’s referendum vote
-
Exclusive: Currency speculator warns devaluation would mean more disruption than when UK dropped out of ERM in 1992
-
Sterling bounces back from weeks of heavy selling as traders react to apparent shift in support towards EU remain vote
-
Biggest one-day jump for the pound since 2009, as the FTSE 100 surges by over 200 points
-
The British capital is strongly in favour of staying in the European Union and strongly connected with it too
-
Editorial: Economists are agreed, as they never were on the euro, that quitting the EU will make Britain poorer. How strange, in an economically conservative country, that many are refusing to listen
-
‘Economic arguments are clearly in favour of remaining in the EU’, economics professors write
-
Letters: Brexit would create major uncertainty about Britain’s alternative future trading arrangements, both with the rest of Europe and with important markets like the USA, Canada and China
-
Major changes to the capital’s most famous shopping street look to be on their way, though how closely they match Sadiq Khan’s manifesto promise remains to be seen
Multinationals warn of UK job cuts and lower profits after Brexit vote