The Office for Students: Proposed strategy and decision to pause applications

The Office for Students (OfS) strategy for 2025 to 2030 establishes priorities in the areas of quality, student experience, and sector resilience. The OfS is currently pausing aspects of its regulatory functions to focus on financial sustainability among education providers. This action is supported by the government. However, critics argue the OfS’s decision will cause financial difficulties to some education providers and leave some students without the protection of the regulator.

The Office for Students: Proposed strategy and decision to pause applications

Non-Domestic Rating (Multipliers and Private Schools) Bill: HL Bill 61 of 2024–25

This government bill would enable changes to the business rates regime. It would allow the introduction of additional business rate multipliers to increase business rates for larger properties and reduce business rates for retail, hospitality and leisure properties, and the removal of charitable rate relief from some private schools that are charities.

Non-Domestic Rating (Multipliers and Private Schools) Bill: HL Bill 61 of 2024–25

Economic growth conditions: Discussion and debate

Economic growth is a consequence of increases in the stocks of labour and capital and the efficiency with which factors of production are used. Economists disagree on the potential to improve conditions for growth. Optimists point to the scope for policy changes in areas such as housing and energy to lift economic growth. Pessimists argue that structural headwinds mean the economy’s weak performance of the last decade-and-a-half will persist. Beyond policy, cultural factors may also play an important role in determining the economy’s growth prospects.

Economic growth conditions: Discussion and debate
  • In Focus

    Budget tax measures: Context for the UK’s nations and regions

    Tax measures announced in the autumn 2024 budget included reforms to agricultural property relief for inheritance tax, changes to employer national insurance contributions and the extension of VAT to private school fees. This briefing provides some context to assess the potential economic impact of these measures on the nations and regions of the UK.

  • In Focus

    Are the government’s growth ambitions realisable?

    The government has set out an ambition to raise the growth rate of the UK economy. This briefing looks at how realistic this ambition is. Faster growth in GDP could help deal with some of the economic and social challenges facing the UK. While achieving this goal confronts several structural obstacles, advances in technology and addressing some current obstacles holding back economic activity have the potential to lift the economy onto a higher growth path.

  • In Focus

    Mobile phones in schools: Mandating a ban?

    Academic research suggests that mobile phones in schools can adversely affect pupils’ educational attainment and contribute to problems such as bullying. But some experts point to potential learning benefits and argue that a blanket ban on phones could prove ineffective and counterproductive. Government guidance discourages the use of phones in schools but defers to school leaders on prohibiting their use. Most schools in England already have policies limiting the use of phones.

  • In Focus

    Autumn budget 2024: Key announcements and analysis

    The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, used her first budget to announce a significant increase in public spending, financed by a combination of tax rises and higher borrowing. Commentators noted that the extra day-to-day spending would mean better funded public services and that more spending on public investment could support the economy’s long-run growth potential. However, they also anticipated a squeeze in household income growth and highlighted the Office for Budget Responsibility’s forecast that there would be no medium-term boost to GDP from the measures.

  • In Focus

    Impact of tax policy on employment

    This briefing examines taxes on employment in the UK and internationally, exploring the potential relationship between taxation and employment. It has been prepared ahead of the upcoming House of Lords debate on the government’s assessment of the impact of tax policy on employment.