Did Labour 'fix the figures' on unemployment while in office?
Nigel Hawkes :: Thu 7th Jun 2012
Sheila Bird :: Fri 1st Jun 2012
Peterborough Prison: can matching ride to the rescue of a non-randomized study?
Full Fact :: Fri 1st Jun 2012
Did Labour 'fix the figures' on unemployment while in office?
Nigel Hawkes :: Thu 31st May 2012
Nigel Hawkes :: Tue 15th May 2012
Full Fact :: Thu 10th May 2012
Heathrow queues report exposes need for better immigration data
Fri 10th Dec 2010
Thu 5th Aug 2010
Wed 26th May 2010
Today’s unemployment figures make gloomy reading, with total unemployment up to 2.64 million, a 17-year high.
The elections in Scotland are proving a happy hunting ground for those who can scent a duff statistic.
Feeling cheerful? Then take a dip into a report that emerged recently from the Cabinet Office.
“Rise of the high-flying wives who leave hubby in the home” wrote the Daily Mail.
New Year’s Day, and the end of a decade, is as good a time as any to look at the economy’s vital signs.
A Straight Statistics reader, John Huggins, has taken exception to a graphic in The Guardian, illustrating the rise in youth unemployment.
When a minister calls an inquiry the day before key statistics are due to appear, smell a rat. Sniff even harder when the inquiry is leaked to a few journalists, and nothing appears on the departmental website.
The latest labour market statistics, issued by ONS today, show that unemployment rose by 232,000 between February and April 2009, while number in employment fell by 271,000 comparded to the three months to January.