NEWS

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Teenage staff 'are too costly'

Published in Daily Express here.

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19 February 2011

Dr Eamonn Butler's arguments that youngsters are unable to find work as a result of the minimum wage are explored in the Daily Express.

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Eamonn Butler on scrapping the minimum wage

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18 February 2011

Dr Eamonn Butler argues for the scrapping of the minimum wage on the Today Programme. In the debate with a TUC representive Paul Sellers he argues that the minimum wage actually increases the levels of youth unemployment.

You can listen to Eamonn here (starting at approx. 51mins)

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Curing youth unemployment

Published in the Spectator Coffee House here

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16 February 2011

Dr Eamonn Butler argues in The Spectator that the best way to tackle youth unemployment is to scrap the minimum wage.

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Eamonn Butler on the need to liberate libraries

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11 February 2011

Dr Eamonn Butler argues that our libraries need to be released into the private sector and modernised on BBC World Service.

You can listen to Eamonn on BBC World Service here (at approx. 14 mins).

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Eamonn Butler on the need to liberate libraries

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11 February 2011

Dr Eamonn Butler argues that our libraries need to be released into the private sector and modernised on BBC World Service.

You can listen to Eamonn on BBC World Service here (at approx. 14 mins).

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Lost in the woods

Published in the Spectator Coffee House here

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10 February 2011

Dr Eamonn Butler argues in the Spectator that the government should go further and sell off 92% of the Forestry Commission's assets following the release of Miles Saltiel's paper 'Seeing the wood for the trees'.

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Forest sell off is not radical enough

You can read the article in Guardian Comment is Free here

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10 February 2011

Following the release of the report 'Seeing the Wood for the Trees' by Miles Saltiel, Dr Eamonn Butler tells Guardian Comment is Free readers that the Forestry Commission has failed to deliver benefits for the environment or the public.

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Government should sell off over 90% of Forestry Commission’s land to raise £4.3bn

10 February 2011

· The Adam Smith Institute’s latest report argues that 92% of the Forestry Commission’s land could be privatised without endangering valuable broadleaf forests.

· The Forestry Commission should act purely as a regulator to avoid any conflict of interest. It should not own or operate woodland.

According to a report released today (THURSDAY) by the Adam Smith Institute the government should be more ambitious in their plans to sell off the Forestry Commission’s land. 92% of the Commission’s land is coniferous or non-wooded, including farmland, and could be sold to raise up to £4.3bn without any impact on the broadleaf woodland most valued for public use.

These broadleaf forests, valued for their heritage and amenity, only make up 8% of the Forestry Commission’s land, and are generally not up for sale. The vast majority of the Commission’s woodlands are coniferous, with no bio-diversity, little variety of fauna and scant public amenity, says the report’s author, Miles Saltiel.

The Commission is also subject to inherent conflicts of interest as the largest single forest-owner and as the forest regulator, leading to chronic obstruction of Britain’s forestry sector. It has also failed in its key aims, including the following:

· Prevention of countryside erosion – its forestry practices is believed to have contributed to the acidification of Britain’s rivers

· Provision of visual amenity to the public – little has been done since insensitive tree-planting policies before the late eighties

· Assistance to the survival of natural fauna – the monoculture of plantations has limited ecological diversity

· Provision of a return on the public’s investment – this has never happened

The Forestry Commission’s failure to meet its aims mean that it is not fit for purpose and should sell or lease all its land, subject to covenants and arms-length regulation, which would protect the environment and ensure continued public access where appropriate. The Commission would then become a purely regulatory body. This would save the government £240million per annum in administrative costs, while also raising £4.3bn.

In this scenario, heritage woodlands like the Forest of Dean could be protected through a scheme of “voucher privatization”, whereby local citizens are given a stake in the forests rather than using charities or other intermediary groups. As the report notes, most of the UK’s broadleaf woodland is already privately owned, so this is not as radical a proposal as critics might suggest.

Dr Eamonn Butler, Director of the Adam Smith Institute, said:

“The Forestry Commission is a quango that has failed on all its objectives. It is not fit for purpose: it cannot regulate the UK's forests and be the largest forestry owner and manager itself.

“If we want to improve the forest environment, boost public access, and get better management and new capital into our woodlands, we need to open up state forestry to new people with new ideas. And we should do that not just in England, but in the other parts of the UK where the dead hand of state forestry denies real amenity and return to taxpayers.”

You can read the full report here

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Media contact:  

emily@adamsmith.org

Media phone: 07584778207

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