Recent Release | 10 Mar 2023

The case for a permanent investment deduction

Scenarios & Macroeconomic Modelling

Oxford Economics

This report is CBI‘s business case for a successor to the super-deduction regime. It investigates policy options the UK can deploy to maintain its global tax competitiveness and avoid a drop in business investment.

Background to the research:

CBI analysis, conducted in collaboration with Oxford Economics, shows that a permanent investment deduction (100% full expensing) could unlock:

The experts behind the research

Felicity and Daniel, members of the Scenarios and Macro Modelling team, are world leaders in quantitative economic analysis, working with clients around the globe and across sectors to build models, forecast markets and evaluate interventions using state-of-the art techniques.

Felicity Hannon

Associate Director, Climate Scenarios & Macroeconomic Modelling

Daniel Moseley

Lead Economist, Scenarios and Macro Modelling

You might be interested in

Economic Insights: Airbnb’s Contribution Through the Lens of Oxford Economics

Oxford Economics Australia delivered a tailored economic impact assessment for Airbnb, including GDP contribution modelling, job creation analytics, guest‑spend segmentation, and regional tourism dispersion insights to underpin Airbnb’s stakeholder communications and strategic growth initiatives.

Find Out More
Workforce and skills modelling to support the finance, technology and business workforce plan

Oxford Economics Australia undertook analysis forecasting workforce and skills requirements for the finance, technology and business sector out to 2030 as a key input to the Future Skills Organisation’s 2025 Workforce Plan.

Find Out More
bank of england
IFRS 9 and the BCST: How the Bank of England’s Latest Stress Test Measures Economic Shocks

The Bank of England’s new BCST stress test introduces a recalibrated approach to measuring financial resilience in reflecting IFRS 9 impacts and a softer, more realistic stress pathway. What does this mean for lenders and the wider economy? Discover how Oxford Economics extends the BoE’s guidance into a global scenario to help businesses stay prepared for the next downturn.

Find Out More
construction worker
Forecasting the future workforce needs of the built environment

Oxford Economics Australia delivered the foundational labour market modelling for BuildSkills Australia’s 2024 Workforce Plan, quantifying future workforce demand across the construction, property, and water sectors.

Find Out More
[autopilot_shortcode]