Labour seeks ‘ambitious’ youth mobility scheme with EU | European Union

Rachel Reeves said the Labor Party would look for a “ambitious youth mobility plan with the EU and allow thousands of young Europeans to live and work temporarily.
Chancellor told Times that the plan would be “good for the economy, good for growth and good for work, but he stopped determining exactly who would be appropriate.
A plan that would allow hundreds of thousands of 18 to 30 years of age from EU countries to live and work in the UK, vice versa, was a basic European demand to reach an economic agreement with the UK.
Reeves said that the change plan will “allow young people in the UK to go and work, travel, voluntarily, gain experience, and learn the language in European countries,” he said.
“And we want young people from these European countries to come to England and to have the opportunities to travel, work and take education in Europe,” he said.
The chancellor also called on the budget responsibility (OBR) office to scoring both the advanced trade relations we negotiated and this youth experience plan.
Reeves’ words, this weekend Labour’s annual party conference and tax increases or expenditure cuts for the possibility of finding £ 30 billion in November, the budget in November.
Despite the gloomy financial appearance to the budget, the chancellor excluded the deying tax option. “If you look at the world and countries with a reserve tax, they tend to have other taxes such as inheritance tax and capital income tax,” he said.
“These taxes bring large amounts in the UK and I do not want to risk the income of those who experiment on something different.”
In addition, Keir Starmer’s potential successor, launched by Greater Manchester’s workers’ Mayor Andy Burnham returned to the economic proposals.
Burnham said that an increase in the UK’s major council program and higher paid taxes, a fee on expensive London houses, and a £ 40 billion extra borrowing, said that a workers’ government should not be “HOCK” to the markets because he believes that he believes that he should follow.
After the bulletin promotion
Reeves, as the Prime Minister’s term of office disaster ended after the “mini budget önünde bid to those adopted by Liz Truss.
“The government later played a great gambling, then made an experiment on the British economy, Rev said Reeves. “And as a result, interest rates went through the roof, mortgage costs passed the roof. Pension was endangered. The government’s borrowing cost also increased.”
“The truth is that we trust these bond markets and those who participate in them to buy our debt”.
Speaking with Financial Times, Burnham argued that his words on bond markets were “deliberately interpreted”. He said: “This is about a long -term approach to regain stronger public opinion control of basic services, to provide a tight grip on public finance and to secure markets.”




