Claer Barrett
Deputy U.K. News Editor, Financial Times
- Business and Finance, United Kingdom
- London
- • Website
About
Deputy UK news editor at the Financial Times, formerly FT's retail correspondent, and one-time property pundit. Views are my own etc
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tweets RT @BBCBreaking: A Sun journalist and an HMRC officer & his partner to be charged over alleged inappropriate payments to public officials, …
RT @PickardJE: Like I said yesterday: sounds a lot like a new fannie mae/freddie mac: new guarantee for up to 130bn of mortgages over 3 ...
RT @ftmoney: Stoke-on-Trent potteries to be exempt from climate change levy. From micromanagement to nanomanagement?! #budget2013
RT @hannahkuchler: Anyone at #Heathrow suffering long immigration queues? Be great if you could speak to the FT - hannah.kuchler@ft.com ...
@hannahkuchler did you survive your passage to glasgow? Have fun today, a few glasses of wine aid sleep on the "sleeper"...
RT @havina_giraffe: @FinancialTimes are looking for people in mortgage arrears/neg eq in in North or midlands.Please get in touch if you ...
RT @andrew_ward1: Parent needs to earn £37,000 a year just to cover wages and taxes for average London nanny t.co/ixlQaNH7
Crackdown on cash-in-hand for nannies
ft.com — Families who pay cash-in-hand wages to a nanny are facing a crackdown by HM Revenue & Customs, which intends to target the thousands of affluent households who are employing childcarers without paying tax. The move, amid broader measures to tackleRT @OlegDesh: Must they regulate everything?Crackdown on cash-in-hand for nannies: t.co/clVvy1be #FT
Crackdown on cash-in-hand for nannies
ft.com — Families who pay cash-in-hand wages to a nanny are facing a crackdown by HM Revenue & Customs, which intends to target the thousands of affluent households who are employing childcarers without paying tax. The move, amid broader measures to tackleRT @barrygilbertson: Am compiling a guide for job applicant students. What are your top 3 things you look for when interviewing a gradua ...
Time to let the high street die, says Harjeet Johal in FT. Comment trail makes interesting reading! t.co/e2XfeKDu
Time to let the British high street die
ft.com — The British high street has "national treasure" status. The concept of local shops serving local people is held dear, fiercely defended by politicians and Mary Portas, the celebrity retail consultant who last year told the government to stage a clampdown on out-of-town developments in order to rescue the high street.Sign up to discover more journalists who cover Business and Finance, United Kingdom and more.
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