Fix benefits to fix the economy
We must get Brits back to work
	We must get Brits back to work
	
	
	The media mogul suggests watching a happy movie and staying outside as he works towards a better life-work balance and more family time
	The freedom to choose between work and raising children has been eroded by economics, says top girls' school head Marina Gardiner Legge
	Drop in EU immigration has given British workers better bargaining power
	
	
	Mel Stride is right: state aid should exist for people who cannot work, not those who cannot be bothered
	Jeremy Hunt confirms biggest welfare shake-up for a decade, with claimants coasting on state handouts to be kicked out of the system
	Cabinet Office expects staff to work from office more than 60pc of week under new rules
	No Degree, No Problem: The Forces gave Steve Trench the self-belief to flourish
	Applicants are instead considered by their responses to three questions
	French manufacturer Alstom may be forced to mothball Britain’s biggest train factory
	A degree remains a key driver of social mobility – but should no longer be the default
	Civil service bonuses fuel fastest wage growth in 2 years
	Pharmaceutical giant to stop key operations at Kent facility in cost cutting effort
	Rise of remote staff has led to slowdown in high-speed rail link’s design process
	Gendered parenthood pressures are accentuating a stubborn economic problem
	
	
	Vocational degrees such as games art and e-sports production can lead to better-paid jobs than established courses like law
	Comments come as telecommunications company plans to axe up to 55,000 jobs by 2030
	No Degree, No Problem: Telegraph Money speaks to people who made their fortune without going to university
	Attacks on Eat Out To Help Out at the inquiry show why the establishment got the pandemic so wrong
	Workers receive more responsibility but less training amid public sector brain drain
	£165 trillion discrepancy cannot be rectified with a head-in-the-sand approach
	Newspaper group to axe traditional editorial staff amid plans to target younger audiences
	Weak economy and high interest rates force businesses to wield axe