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Why Rachel Reeves should give bankers more of the cold shoulder at Davos 2026 | Heather Stewart

about 11 hours ago
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Back-slapping bankers will be thick on the ground in the Swiss ski resort of Davos this week as Rachel Reeves flies in to mix with the global elite.But she might be wise to treat the finance bros with a certain froideur.That has not been Labour’s approach thus far: Reeves spared the banks from a windfall tax in her 26 November budget, and the UK’s regulators have just loosened capital rules for the first time since the financial crisis.Back in the summer, bank share prices ticked down after the Labour-leaning Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) recommended an £8bn levy on the windfall profits made as a result of quantitative easing (QE).Insiders at other thinktanks said at the time that it was made clear to them by the Treasury that publishing such forthright policy proposals was not a welcome contribution to the debate.

When it came to budget day, the banks were left untouched,JP Morgan responded with the announcement of a new £3bn HQ in Canary Wharf, east London, and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said the “UK government’s priority of economic growth has been a critical factor in helping us make this decision”,His praise came as little surprise, as the FT had already reported that Reeves’s team, lobbied heavily by the banks against a windfall tax, had been urging financial executives to show their gratitude for the chancellor’s forbearance,Little more than a week later, the Bank of England announced it would reduce banks’ capital requirements – the reserves they must hold against their assets to absorb potential losses,The logic for both decisions was clear: the financial sector is, as Reeves told City bigwigs in her first Mansion House speech, the “crown jewel” of the economy, and with growth puttering along just above zero, now is not the time to plunder the banks for tax revenue.

Moreover, the argument goes, lowering capital requirements will free up more lending capacity so that banks can support productive economic activity.As the Bank’s financial policy committee (FPC), which sets the benchmark for reserves, put it: “Banks should have greater certainty and confidence in using their capital resources to lend to UK households and businesses.” The move followed Reeves urging all regulators to act to bolster growth.Except … there is a catch.As contributors to a timely conference at the London School of Economics (LSE) made clear last week, once a country’s financial industry reaches a certain size – which the UK’s sector has long surpassed – it stops boosting growth and starts to become a brake, a result reinforced in a string of academic papers spread over more than a decade.

Alex Cobham, the chief executive of the Tax Justice Network, was one of the conveners of the appropriately named Too Much Finance conference,“We seem to be in a generation in which our politicians are trapped in the view that finance is one of the great things that the UK has to offer, and we really need to protect it and grow it,” he said,“Actually, the research really consistently shows that the UK is far past the point where we would maximise the benefits of finance,And actually it’s a drag on the economy, and has been for a long time,”That’s partly because having a disproportionately large finance sector leaves the UK more prone to finance-driven crises, as Reeves’s Labour predecessors Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling learned the hard way in 2008.

But it’s also about what it means for how the UK’s economic resources are deployed,As one landmark academic paper, by Stephen Cecchetti and Enisse Kharroubi of the Bank for International Settlements, put it back in 2012: “Finance literally bids rocket scientists away from the satellite industry,The result is that people who might have become scientists, who in another age dreamed of curing cancer or flying to Mars, today dream of becoming hedge fund managers,”Or as Adair Turner, then chair of the Financial Services Authority, pithily put it in 2009, when the memory of the financial crisis was still fresh, much of the activity that goes on in the City is “socially useless”,At last week’s conference, Dariusz Wójcik, an economic geographer at the University of Singapore, cited evidence that even at city level, a large financial sector – measured in terms of its share of employment – is bad for growth, once it expands beyond a certain size.

The implication is that rather than courting and cosseting bank bosses, politicians should be using the levers of tax and regulation to keep them in check,The former Bank of England chief economist John Vickers and David Aikman, director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, attacked the decision to cut capital requirements last week,They argued instead that with little room for manoeuvre in the public finances, and risks lurking in the global economy, reserve requirements should be set higher,“If banks wished to expand lending, they could have done so using their existing capital headroom,” they said,“The most likely practical effect of this weakening of resilience will be higher payouts to bank shareholders rather than increased lending to the real economy.

”For now, with the AI boom in full swing, the banks and the increasingly powerful private credit lenders are riding high,But, as Cobham argues, after watching the events of 2008 unfold, “we know that the risks that the financial sector creates will end up being socialised when they crystallise –so we’ll all pay for them”,
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Civilised but casual, often hilarious, Adelaide writers’ week is everything a festival should be – except this year | Tory Shepherd

The sun almost always shines on Adelaide writers’ week, held on Kaurna land each year at the tail end of summer.For those who start looking forward to it as soon as soon as the Christmas tree is packed away (or earlier, frankly) there’s a sense of loss, of betrayal, at the omnishambles that has led to its cancellation this year.We’re bereft, and angry – not least because some of the most vocal critics seem to have no idea what writers’ week actually is.During Adelaide’s Mad March, the city’s parklands are home to the festival fringe’s sprawling performance spaces, bars and restaurants. On a Sunday you might leave behind the carnival chaos of the Garden of Unearthly Delights

2 days ago
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‘Soon I will die. And I will go with a great orgasm’: the last rites of Alejandro Jodorowsky

The Chilean film-maker’s psychedelic work earned him the title ‘king of the midnight movie’, and a fan in John Lennon. Now the 96-year-old is ready for the end – but first there is more living to doThe Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.There is an apocryphal story of an ageing Orson Welles introducing himself to the guests at a half-empty town hall

2 days ago
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Call this social cohesion? The war of words that laid waste to the 2026 Adelaide writers’ festival

How a boardroom flare-up sparked an international boycott – and a looming defamation battleIt began as a quiet programming dispute in the genteel city of churches.But by Wednesday morning, a frantic, six-day war of words had culminated in the end of the 2026 Adelaide writers’ week and total institutional collapse.What started with the discreet exit of a business titan and arts board veteran spiralled into boardroom carnage last weekend, with mass resignations, lawyers’ letters of demands and allegations of racism and hypocrisy flung by all sides.By the time the writers’ week director, Louise Adler, walked, the boycott of writers, commentators and academics had gone global and the state’s premier cultural event had become a hollowed-out shell.The cancellation of AWW may only be the opening act

3 days ago
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Seth Meyers on ICE: ‘An army of out-of-shape uncles’

Late-night hosts talked cratering public opinion on the Trump administration’s deployment of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in US communities and the president’s apparent preference for whole milk.Seth Meyers opened Wednesday’s Late Night with a reminder to viewers about how Trump “sold his mass deportation program to voters during the campaign”.That would be by declaring some version of “We are going to start with violent criminals” again and again.“If you say you’re going to get violent criminals off the streets, of course people are going to be into that. But that was a lie,” Meyers noted

3 days ago
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Ian McKellen to star as LS Lowry in documentary revealing trove of unheard tapes

Fifteen years ago, Sir Ian McKellen was among the leading arts figures who criticised the Tate for not showing its collection of paintings by LS Lowry in its London galleries and questioned whether the “matchstick men painter” had been sidelined as too northern and provincial.Now, 50 years after Lowry’s death, McKellen is to star in a BBC documentary that will reveal a trove of previously unheard audio tapes recorded with Lowry in the 1970s during his final four years of life.The interview is the longest the artist ever gave and was recorded in his living room, his “private sanctuary”. The tapes are said to reveal Lowry’s authentic voice, which McKellen will lip-sync on screen.The Lancashire-born actor described the role as a “unique privilege”

3 days ago
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Has Joe Rogan fully soured on Trump’s presidency?

Joe Rogan’s comparison of US immigration raids to Gestapo operations, made during a podcast episode earlier this week, has sparked speculation about whether the wildly popular podcaster, who endorsed Donald Trump in 2024, has fully soured on Trump’s presidency – and what that might say of the millions of mainly young men who listen to Rogan’s show.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.Rogan’s views, as expressed in the podcast discussion, were more complicated than the Gestapo remark taken alone might make them seem

3 days ago
sportSee all
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Tennis civil war erupts with details of initial peace deal revealed for first time

about 9 hours ago
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Emma Raducanu recovers from slow start to ease through at Australian Open

about 9 hours ago
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Sussex CCC placed in special measures over alleged financial mismanagement

about 11 hours ago
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The Joy of Six: stories of love in sport

about 14 hours ago
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Britain’s Arthur Fery delivers Australian Open upset with win over 20th seed Flavio Cobolli

about 15 hours ago
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Easier start for Alex de Minaur as Matteo Berrettini withdraws from Australian Open

about 17 hours ago