Thursday newspaper round-up: UK debt, living wage, Newport Wafer Fab
Britain’s mounting debts will be unsustainable if the government presses ahead with sweeping tax cuts in a mini-budget on Friday, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinktank. Fuelling concerns that the UK’s precarious financial position will spark a run on the pound, the chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, is expected to reverse an increase in national insurance payments and cut corporation tax at a cost to the Treasury of £30bn. – Guardian
Almost 400,000 workers in the UK whose employers are signed up to paying the real living wage are in line for a record pay rise, as the charity that sets the rate approved an increase to £10.90 an hour for outside London. The Living Wage Foundation said it was launching the annual increase two months earlier than planned and had recommended its biggest single rise yet in recognition of the intense pressure on households from rocketing energy prices and the highest inflation rate in 40 years. – Guardian
The co-founder of collapsed energy supplier Bulb is planning to start a new company after landing a job at a venture capital fund backed by the former foreign secretary David Miliband. Hayden Wood has been appointed as venture partner at Giant VC, where he will be tasked with finding European start-ups to invest in. – Telegraph
The first Chinese car brand will be sold in Britain within months after a leading UK dealer revealed it is in the final stages of a deal with the country's biggest electric vehicle maker. Pendragon said it expects to begin selling cars from BYD, which is based in Guangdong Province, before the end of the year. – Telegraph
Employees of the semiconductor firm Newport Wafer Fab, whose controversial takeover by a Chinese-backed business is under review by the government on national security grounds, have weighed into the row over its future. In a strongly worded letter to The Times, the staff association, which says it represents the 582 employees, said they “fully support Nexperia and its ownership of our site” because it has provided stability, improved job security, wages and working conditions. – The Times
The head of Co-op Food is to leave the retailer after five years, while the boss of its wholesale business Nisa will also stand down. Jo Whitfield will step down from her role to “pursue her next challenge” after leading a reinvention of its food business, the retailer said yesterday. – The Times