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    UK food and drink exports to EU down 34% since Brexit ‘due to red tape’

    UK food and drink exports are down by more than a third since Brexit, with claims bureaucracy is to blame. Although some products including whisky, chocolate and cheese remain popular with EU customers, overall, there has been a sharp decline in food and drink traded with the bloc, according to the Food and Drink Federation’s (FDF) latest report. It found export volumes of food fell 34.1 per cent in 2024 in comparison to 2019 figures, to 6.37bn kilograms.The FDF blamed post-Brexit trading arrangements for the slump, highlighting how bureaucratic barriers have changed the relationship between the UK and the EU. The UK’s global food export volumes are almost 20 per cent lower on average between 2020-2024 than they were between 2015-2019. Although some of the fall in exports since the UK left the EU five years ago can be attributed to the Covid pandemic and the war in Ukraine, other countries including Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands all saw an increase in their average volumes. “This decline shows that the UK’s challenges aren’t part of a global trend but rather unique to the UK’s post-Brexit circumstances,” the report said. Food and drink imports entering the UK are subject to fewer checks than UK businesses exporting similar products (Liam McBurney/PA) More

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    Tech secretary asks ChatGPT for policy advice

    The minister responsible for artificial intelligence (AI) turned to ChatGPT for policy advice, it has emerged. Science and tech secretary Peter Kyle asked the AI chatbot why small businesses in the UK were slow to adopt the technology, records show. Mr Kyle also asked the software which podcasts he could appear on to reach the widest audience possible, and for definitions of terms such as “quantum” and “digital inclusion”. Records obtained under freedom of information laws by the New Scientist magazine show Mr Kyle asked ChatGPT: “I’m secretary of state for science, innovation and technology in the United Kingdom. What would be the best podcasts for me to appear on to reach a wide audience that’s appropriate for my ministerial responsibilities?” Peter Kyle, secretary of state for Science, Innovation and Technology, said he uses ChatGPT “often” in an interview More

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    Will the UK enter a recession after Britain’s GDP shrinks unexpectedly?

    The UK economy unexpectedly shrunk by 0.1 per cent in January, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), in a massive blow to Labour’s growth agenda.The figure comes just weeks before Rachel Reeves’s spring statement on 26 March, when the chancellor will give her updated plans for the UK economy. Billions in welfare cuts and reduced spending for other departments are widely expected to form part of her announcement.Responding to the new GDP figures, Ms Reeves said Britain was “feeling the consequences” of global events, likely referencing the ongoing Ukraine peace negotiations and US president Donald Trump’s imposition of international trading tariffs.Rachel Reeves will deliver Labour’s spring statement on 26 March More

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    Six-week pension delays after Rachel Reeves’s Budget triggers panic

    Rachel Reeves’ Autumn Budget triggered a rush to pull cash out of pension funds which has led to six-week delays for savers withdrawing money. The chancellor’s October inheritance tax raid has sparked a surge in people seeking to take their cash out of retirement pots in a bid to avoid paying the levy, after Ms Reeves scrapped an exemption on them.One person was left waiting two months for their payment, it has emerged.Currently, the levy is charged at 40 per cent on assets over £325,000, with those passing on their main homes eligible for an extra £175,000 allowance meaning couples can pass on up to £1 million tax free.Rachel Reeves’ Budget sparked a rush in savers trying to access their pension pots More

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    UK ploughs £1.3bn into army recruitment to bolster depleted armed forces

    Ministers are ploughing £1.3bn into army recruitment to bolster the UK’s depleted armed forces and tackle a crisis of staff retention, The Independent can reveal. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) last month announced the creation of a new body, the Armed Forces Recruitment Service (AFRS), to streamline the hiring process and ensure the British military “remains ready to face emerging threats”. It is set to launch in 2027 and will replace individual schemes run by the Royal Navy, British army, and Royal Air Force. John Healey said ‘deep-set problems’ were plaguing the armed forces’ ability to recruit and retain staff More

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    Keir Starmer abolishes NHS England to bring health service back to ‘heart of government’

    Sir Keir Starmer has announced that NHS England will be abolished to free up more money for frontline services and bring management of the health service “back into democratic control”. The prime minister said the independent body which runs the NHS would go in a move to slash red tape and dramatically reduce costs by cutting duplication. Ministers said the plans, which will mean more than 9,000 job losses, would help deliver savings of hundreds of millions of pounds a year, which would be used to cut waiting times. The Tories tepidly welcomed the move, warning Labour it had to deliver, while health think tanks said that another reorganisation of the NHS risked diverting “time and energy” away from improving care for patients. Ministers have pledged more money for frontline services (PA) More

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    Inside PIP: The ‘broken’ health benefit Labour could cut even further

    As Labour’s crunch Spring Statement draws near, details of the rumoured cuts to welfare have grown rife. Estimates of what the government is hoping to save have continued to grow – now sitting at around £6 billion – with health and disability related benefits understood to be at the heart of the changes.Reforms to the Personal Independence Payment (PIP) have now been widely reported, although Labour MPs are understood to be divided on the cost-cutting package. Claimed by 3.6 million people, the payment is designed to help people with extra costs incurred by their disability, whether they are working or not.The changes will include making it harder to qualify for PIP, likely by changing the descriptors assessors use to determine if an applicant is eligible for the benefit. Further savings are also to be made by freezing PIP payments next year, ITV reports, meaning they will not rise with inflation as in previous years.The plans come as spending on all health-related benefits rose to £65bn last year – up 25 per cent from the year before the Covid pandemic. They are forecast to rise to £70bn before the next election. The prime minister on Monday called the current system ‘unsustainable, indefensible and unfair’.“People feel that in their bones,” he said, “It runs contrary to those deep British values that if you can work, you should. And if you want to work, the government should support you, not stop you.”But welfare experts, alongside claimants with experience of PIP, say the benefit is already too hard to claim, and cutting it back further would be ‘catastrophic’. In an open letter, organisations including Disability Rights UK, Citizens Advice, and Sense urged Rachel Reeves to “safeguard” PIP and other health-related in her upcoming spring statement. Around 700,000 disabled people “could be pushed into poverty” without it, disability equality charity Scope adds.David Southgate, policy manager at Scope told The Independent: “Life costs a lot more when you’re disabled, and disability benefits are a lifeline.“The benefits system desperately needs improving, but cutting benefits will just push thousands more disabled people into poverty.”The PIP application process is “complex, stressful and degrading” he adds, something several claimants attest to. Generally, to apply for the benefit, applicants must call the DWP’s dedicated phone line, complete the 90-plus question paper form that is sent to them, and return it.In most cases, an application will then be followed by an assessment, which is carried out on the phone or in-person. It is this assessment where most claimants find they run into the greatest difficulty.Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer has the current benefits system is ‘unsustainable, indefensible and unfair’. More

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    Starmer insists ‘there’s no return to austerity’ despite benefits and civil service cuts

    Slashing billions from the benefit bill and cutting the size of the civil service does not mark a return to austerity, Sir Keir Starmer has insisted, vowing that “we are not going down that route”.There is mounting unease at the prime minister’s plans to cut welfare spending by up to £6bn but Sir Keir said “part of the problem we’ve got with our public services is what was done to them a decade or so ago” by David Cameron and George Osborne. “We are not going down that route, none of our plans go down that route,” the PM vowed. Sir Keir Starmer has vowed no return to austerity under Labour More