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    Explore "pension policy" with insightful episodes like "3. A Battle for the Heart of the Music Industry", "Have the Tories found their next Brexit?" and "How bad will recession be and what will recovery look like?" from podcasts like ""The Rest Is Money", "Oh God, What Now?" and "This is Money Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    3. A Battle for the Heart of the Music Industry

    3. A Battle for the Heart of the Music Industry
    How significant is the resignation of BP’s boss? Is there trouble looming on the horizon for British pensions? Has Universal Music Group reshaped the future of streaming? Why are American investment firms taking over European football? Tune in to hear today’s episode of The Rest Is Money where Robert and Steph answer all these questions and more. Email: restismoney@gmail.com Twitter: @TheRestIsMoney Instagram: @TheRestIsMoney TikTok: @RestIsMoney goalhangerpodcasts.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    Have the Tories found their next Brexit?

    Have the Tories found their next Brexit?
    The Tories have been way behind in the polls for a long time. But could a comeback be on the cards? The data shows that a Labour government isn’t guaranteed after 2024’s general election. What does Keir Starmer need to do? And has Sunak found the next Brexit in the European Court on Human Rights. Not many people fully understand what it is, but perhaps that plays into the Tory’s hands. Could they take us out? And in the extra bit for subscribers, our panel recounts the worst paid jobs they’ve ever had. That’s Oh God, What Now? with special guest, chair of human rights charity EachOtherm Adam Wagner. “I think a lot of people know that a new Labour government wouldn’t be a magic bullet to solve the cost of living crisis.” – Zoë Grünewald. “When you talk about reform over spending it’s just not as sexy, so selling that will be a big challenge for Labour.” – Zoë Grünewald. “Sometimes they’ll say the idea of human rights is completely unBritish and unnecessary.” – Adam Wagner. “What underlies this all is that it’s not all about sovereignty, it’s also about the fundamental ideas of these rights … protecting refugees.” – Adam Wagner. www.patreon.com/ohgodwhatnow We’re on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVOIkIWUDtu7VrVcFs0OI0A Written and Presented by Ros Taylor with Zoë Grünewald, Marie Le Conte and guest Adam Wagner. Producers: Alex Rees & Chris Jones. Social Media Producer: Jess Harpin. Audio production by: Alex Rees. Group Editor: Andrew Harrison. Managing Editor: Jacob Jarvis. OH GOD, WHAT NOW? is a Podmasters production. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    How bad will recession be and what will recovery look like?

    How bad will recession be and what will recovery look like?
    The economic destruction of the coronavirus crash was laid bare in reports from the Office of Budget Responsibility and IMF this week.

    Lockdown has already wiped £50billion off the UK economy and is costing the nation £2billion a day, said the OBR.

    Meanwhile, the IMF warned the global economy would take the biggest hit since the Great Depression in the 1930s, with advanced economies shrinking 6.1% this year and developing countries by 1%. 

    But although the OBR forecast an astonishing 35% slump in UK output in the second quarter of this year - with a three-month lockdown - the other side of its chart showed a substantial bounce-back.

    What will we need to do for that recovery to happen – and what will it look like?

    On this week’s podcast, Simon Lambert and Georgie Frost look at the reports on the economic impact of Covid-19 and at the potential bounce back, along with which sectors and businesses could seize the day when it comes.

    They also discuss the big tech firms that have benefitted from lockdowns and working from home around the world. 

    The lofty valuations of these companies marked the top of the previous stock market boom, but their shares have fared better than most in the coronavirus crash. Can the FAANG stocks (and Tesla) pick up where they left off?

    And finally, investors are told to think long-term with the minimum investment period traditionally cited as five years. But have the events of the past 21 years on the stock market shown that now we need to think in decades instead?