Paul Johnson
pjtheeconomist.bsky.social
Paul Johnson
@pjtheeconomist.bsky.social

From August, Provost, The Queen’s College, Oxford. Previously director, Institute for Fiscal Studies. Author “Follow the Money”

Paul Gavin Johnson is a British economist. Since 2025, he has been the provost of The Queen's College, Oxford. He served as director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies from 2011 until 2025. He is also a columnist for The Times, and a visiting professor in Economics at the Department of Economics, University College London. He is author of the best selling book Follow the Money and a frequent contributor to written and broadcast media. .. more

Economics 31%
Political science 22%

Paul Johnson would actually like the economy to work better for all, to see incomes grow and social mobility expand. He supports effective pro-growth policies. He is less keen on posturing politicians who pretend they have simple solutions and whose policies would damage all the above.
Paul Johnson is looking to protect and maintain the status quo

@pjtheeconomist.bsky.social

Reposted by Paul Johnson

Paul Johnson is looking to protect and maintain the status quo

@pjtheeconomist.bsky.social

Reposted by Paul Johnson

@pjtheeconomist.bsky.social Thank you for an excellent article in today's (20th September 2025) edition of the FT. A long-term overhaul and simplification of the UK's tax system is badly needed. #Reeves' kite flying of possible actions is both unprofessional and dangerous, isn't it?

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Stamp duty is not the only way in which our housing tax system is outrageously inefficient and inequitable: council tax is regressive, being charged at higher rates on less expensive properties.
(£) www.thetimes.com/business-mon...
By @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social
We need to move on from the dreadful stamp duty system
The cost of moving crisis, which dates back to Gordon Brown, must end — and there’s an obvious solution for how to make things fairer
www.thetimes.com

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"The reality is, if they want more spending on welfare and public services, and they want economic growth, they are going to have to get serious about broad-based tax increases."

✍️ @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social gives his two pence on the government's growth problem
What can Rachel Reeves learn from the 1970s IMF crisis? - UK in a changing Europe
Paul Johnson reflects on the 1970s IMF crisis and the key parallels and differences between then and the current challenges the government...
ukandeu.ac.uk

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"The Greens and Corbyn to the left and Reform to the right peddle utterly incoherent, populist economic policies yet are taking large shares in opinion polls."

✍️ @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social argues the solution to the UK's fiscal problems is political not technocratic

ukandeu.ac.uk/what-can-rac...
What can Rachel Reeves learn from the 1970s IMF crisis? - UK in a changing Europe
Paul Johnson reflects on the 1970s IMF crisis and the key parallels and differences between then and the current challenges the government...
ukandeu.ac.uk

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interesting from @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social @thetimes.com (£) on the madness of remuneration in the public sector and the danger of false economies. www.thetimes.com/business-mon...
We need fat cats in the public sector if we want the best policy
Public sector pay is a fraction of what similar private sector roles command
www.thetimes.com

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sensible stuff on the "revived" Pensions Commission from @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social in @thetimes.com www.thetimes.com/business-mon...
Here's @instituteforgovernment.org.uk take on lessons this Pensions Commission should learn from its predecessor www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/comment/new-...
Pensions commission must resist being warned off triple lock
It would be absurd to have a report on the future sustainability of the pension system without addressing this most fundamental of questions
www.thetimes.com

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NEW PODCAST: How is tax damaging the housing market?

@pjtheeconomist.bsky.social, Stuart Adam and Tim Leunig discuss how certain taxes impact the housing market, affecting affordability, renting, and homeownership.

🎧 Listen here: ifs.org.uk/articles/how...
PODCAST: How big are the UK's demographic challenges?

With birth rates at record lows @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social, @melindacmills.bsky.social and Carl Emmerson discuss the implications for the UK and how it might impact the public finances.

🎧 Listen here: https://buff.ly/3YD8S1P

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In his column today, @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social makes the same point I did about social care/NHS/local govt. It makes absolutely no sense to do a big social care review and a massive local govt reorganisation (and an NHS 10-year plan) as separate processes on separate timescales.

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Just finished ‘Follow the Money’. Excellent. Clarity of thinking and comprehensive. Often I despair but you offer some hope. I even understood - ! - the stats. Thank you. Interesting to compare the changes since the last election. Why aren’t you Chancellor?!

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I'm reminded of the brilliant section on NHS reform and counter-reform in Follow the Money by @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social

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Good episode, thanks - good to hear @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social on the statement (made me feel slightly less gloomy!)

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NEW: Where and how does the government spend its money?

@beeboileau.bsky.social, @maxwarner.bsky.social and @benzaranko.bsky.social's new interactive tool allows you to explore where and how the government spends money, over time and across the UK.

📊 Explore the data: ifs.org.uk/calculators/...

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NEW PODCAST: What's the future of corporation tax?

60 years after its introduction, @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social
is joined by @helenmiller.bsky.social and Deloitte UK's Amanda Tickel to discuss all things corporation tax in our latest podcast.

🎧 Listen here: ifs.org.uk/articles/wha...

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📰 Drastic times need drastic action: breaking the 50-year tax taboo.

Read @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social's column in @thetimes.com 👇

www.thetimes.com/business-mon...
Drastic times need drastic action: breaking the 50-year tax taboo
Rachel Reeves should consider increasing the basic rate, just as Denis Healey did in 1975
www.thetimes.com

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NEW: Spending Review explained in under 90 seconds.

@pjtheeconomist.bsky.social summarises what we heard in today's #SpendingReview and what the announcements mean:

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Surprisingly mealy-mouthed responses from commentators with pretty obvious axes to grind. With friends like these… well, good luck to any centre-left party.
Has Rachel Reeves made the right choices? Our panel responds to the spending review
The chancellor announced spending on health, housing, defence, and infrastructure. But will it be felt by ordinary voters? Polly Toynbee, Kirsty Major, Sahil Dutta, Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah and Jonn...
www.theguardian.com

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Average annual real growth in total departmental spending over this parliament is set to be 2.3%.

This is below the previous parliament’s average of 3.6%, but higher than the last government had outlined.

@beeboileau.bsky.social on the big picture choices in the Spending Review:

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NEW: The popularity of new childcare entitlements could leave spending from 2026 onwards £1 billion higher than originally forecast.

Read @ckfarquharson.bsky.social’s briefing on what the Spending Review means for childcare entitlements: ifs.org.uk/articles/pop...

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NEW PODCAST: Spending Review 2025: What it means and why it matters

🎙️ @PJTheEconomist.bsky.social, @helenmiller.bsky.social‬ and @benzaranko.bsky.social discuss what the Spending Review means for public services, government investment, and the broader economic outlook: ifs.org.uk/articles/spe...
Spending Review 2025: What it means and why it matters | Institute for Fiscal Studies
We take a closer look at the Spending Review and what the policies mean for public services, investment and the wider economy. 
ifs.org.uk

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A day late and a dollar short - my productivity is not what it ought to be... Yesterday Rethink on Radio 4 covered Britain's productivity failings. Thanks to my fabulous guests @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social, @margaretheffernan.bsky.social, Gareth Davies from the NAO, and Leslie Perlow from HBS.
BBC Sounds - Rethink, Rethink... productivity
What are the factors behind the UK’s chronically weak productivity growth?
www.bbc.co.uk

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Some light train reading to and from the Police & Fire panel today. Books by @samfr.bsky.social and @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social. So far, sampling both, they are very scary, very concerning and very good. I wish the government would read things like this & not newspaper headlines, X feeds & tealeaves

Thanks Matt. I too can recommend @samfr.bsky.social great book. Glad you like mine too.
Some light train reading to and from the Police & Fire panel today. Books by @samfr.bsky.social and @pjtheeconomist.bsky.social. So far, sampling both, they are very scary, very concerning and very good. I wish the government would read things like this & not newspaper headlines, X feeds & tealeaves

Reposted by Paul Johnson

NEW PODCAST: How to fix UK pensions?

@pjtheeconomist.bsky.social is joined by Carl Emmerson and @laurenceobrien.bsky.social to discuss whether people in the UK will be able to afford a decent standard of living in retirement.

🎧 Listen here: ifs.org.uk/articles/how...

Reposted by Richard Blundell