When Rachel Reeves touches down in snowy Davos next week, she will be embarking on a hectic few days pressing flesh with the global elite. Attendees include big bank bosses, world leaders such as the ...
Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ visit to China and Keir Starmer’s insistence on staying outside the EU single market leaves the UK ...
Reeves' visit to China is a bold first step in the new direction — one where the UK recognizes the importance of economic ...
What a difference a year makes! Last January Rachel Reeves arrived at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos to be feted by its financial 'Masters of the Universe' and world leaders alike.
Chinese President Xi Jinping will not attend President-elect Donald Trump’s swearing-in ceremony, but he is sending Vice ...
Downing Street concludes Emma Reynolds has no conflict of interest regarding any matters relating to Beijing in new ...
That willingness to take top-level political risk to support growth is vital. Regulators will default to conservative positions without strong political support or the correct incentives to be brave.
David Lammy and Yvette Cooper have thrown their weight behind Beijing’s bid to build a new “super-embassy” in London. The ...
KEITH BENNETT explains why, despite its present meagre economic outcomes, an honest and fruitful partnership with China is worth pursuing ...
Britain's finance minister Rachel Reeves said on Thursday she would press regulators on what more her government can do to ...
The Chancellor must have been popping corks when inflation dropped, but does she really think she can keep conning Britain?
Britain has “no choice” but to engage with China if the government is to meet its mission of growing the economy, Reeves wrote in an op-ed for the Times at the weekend. “Reeves: UK needs China” was ...