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DIY investor

Saving the self-employed

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Jan-18
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Other Articles in this Issue


Prospect
Editorial
Truly, this is the bleak midwinter—and not only literally.
Letters & opinions
Letters & opinions
You feature opposing opinions in December’s issue but
Trump’s nemesis
Robert Mueller is discreet, disciplined and on the president’s case
A Brexit cordiale
An open letter to the French President
Smile or die
The happiness industry is a symptom of the sad state of society
The exploitation link
Insecure working and predatory bosses. Are they by some chance related?
A man of his words
How William Tyndale shaped our world
The Tropical Trump
Will Brazil elect a hard-right strongman?
Transport infrastructure is key to powering prosperity post-Brexit
Transport infrastructure is critical to ensuring competitiveness on the global stage. Our panel of experts explain why improving surface access to regional airports can help Britain take off
Speed data
Generation “no thanks”
Young people are drinking and smoking less, taking fewer drugs and having fewer babies
The Duel
Has Christmas dinner had its day?
YES People who dislike Christmas dinner tend to critique
Main Features
Pricing gets personal
Big Data means retailers can figure out exactly what you’re willing to pay— and they’re starting to charge it
A state of flux
Volatility will change the way politicians campaign—and govern
Intimacy rebooted
Sex robots are only a part of the imminent revolution in our bedrooms
Lab cuisine
Farmers’ markets and slow foods are sold as the heart-warming answer to our nutritional needs. But neither we nor the planet can wait
A POSTDIGITAL WORLD
Quantum computers will take us beyond the binary age, into a perplexing new era. And they are already here
The Great Globalisation Lie
Third Way evangelists presented globalisation as inevitable and advantageous to all. In reality, it is neither, and the liberal order is paying the price
The Orwellian eye
The writer whose brutal honesty brought clarity to the 20th century now helps us reckon with the post-truth 21st
Yemen’s moral quagmire
It’s the world’s deadliest humanitarian disaster— and a dozen other nations, including Britain, are making the situation worse
I predict a riot
Britain’s prisons are failing and the government has no plan
Giant ambition
Despite his many faults, Gordon Brown was a towering figure who made the right calls on the biggest issues facing our world
The way we were
Prime ministerial resignations
Extracts from memoirs and diaries, chosen by Ian Irvine
Art & books
Enter the serpent
The Biblical story of Adam and Eve has left us with a legacy of sexual shame, argues Miri Rubin
Behind the faç ade
Richard Rogers’s buildings like to let it all hang out. But his new memoir isn’t quite as revealing, says Gavin Stamp
The lure of utopia
Soviet artists dreamed of a perfect future even as Stalin persecuted them, finds Owen Hatherley
Making of the leisured classes
Anthony Powell was a beady observer of his own caste, argues Fatema Ahmed
Books in brief
You can write a history of anything, says Norman Davies
Things to do this month
Recommends
In a triumphant start to its 250th anniversary year
Prospect Book Club
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of the month (excluding bank holidays) at 6.30pm at 2 Queen Anne’s Gate, London, SW1H 9AA. To book tickets please visit prospectmagazine.co.uk/event
Life
Leith on language
Internet: capital I or lower-case I? Internet or internet?
Life of the mind
For me the problem, I assumed, was my foreign correspondent
Matters of taste
Sitting in a crêperie on the Brittany coast, high blue
Wine
Once the world’s biggest wine import market, the wine
Special report: Skills
Back innovators, not incumbents
It would have been hard not to feel sorry for Greg
Our skilful nation
The budget recognised two things. First, that we are
Britain is making— but who’s buying?
The forecasts released by the Office for Budget Responsibility
Endgames
The generalist by Didymus
Each completed grid will contain solutions beginning
Enigmas & puzzles
Shown below is Santa’s Treasure Map with the capital
Brief Encounter
Brief encounter
The assassination of Bobby Kennedy when I was at boarding
BREXIT BRITAIN: THE FUTURE OF INDUSTRY
State intervention is back
Industrial strategy needs more than just innovation
Industrial strategy: taking back control
Intervention alone will not be enough
The price of exports
The government can help exporters —with finance
Gateways to growth
Exports can rebalance the economy
The ties that bind
Britain is at the centre of a delicate global trade web
No need to reinvent the wheel
The UK hasn’t got the resources to create a new model of trade agreement
Eastern promise
The economies of the far east will become crucial for British trade
Trade—the numbers
The UK’s trade gap is large and represents a huge challenge.
It’s all about place
An industrial strategy needs clear objectives
Power to the people
Control of infrastructure projects needs to reside locally
Setting standards
Investors want openness and transparency
Industry and the regions
Time to look beyond Westminster
The patchwork economy
Globalisation should work for people, not vice versa
Investing in people
An industrial strategy needs the right people
The risks of intervention
Government must take care when making industrial policy
Remaking your future
Now is the time to make the most of what we have