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Post, Glen,
pictured, wrote: “The Treasury firmly believes that any deductions should be applied fairly, and that they should
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Aviva boss Amanda Blanc has been appointed as HM Treasury’s new Women in Finance Champion to spearhead efforts to increase gender diversity across UK financial services.
She succeeds Dame Jayne-Anne Gadhia, who will continue to support the charter as an advisor.
HM Treasury detailed that signatories to the charter commit to help women progress into senior roles, to set targets for gender diversity and report on their progress towards these.
It added that there are now over 400 signatories
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Digital retail is booming but could still fall out of fashion
Clothes seller In the Style is the latest e-commerce chain to try public markets on for size
14 March 2021 • 5:00am
Chloe Patton posed in front of her camera and brandished two parcels stuffed with the latest fashion trends.
In a video for her 32,500 strong army of YouTube subscribers, the influencer modelled lines from In the Style, an online retailer poised for its London Stock Market debut tomorrow.
The perky, 10-minute clip, underscored the symbiotic relationship between social media and online retailers which has fuelled a fast-fashion boom in lockdown.
In the Style’s £105m listing will be the latest e-commerce company rushing to go public on their pandemic-induced riches.
Treasury under scrutiny over links to Greensill
Charles Roxburgh previously worked for McKinsey, where he was part of a taskforce that advised ministers to support reverse factoring
Charles Roxburgh is second permanent secretary of the Treasury
A Treasury mandarin who played a crucial role in assessing appeals by the collapsed lender Greensill Capital to access Covid loans previously helped encourage greater use of the controversial form of finance in which it specialised,
The Telegraph can reveal.
Charles Roxburgh, second permanent secretary to the Treasury, held six meetings with Greensill last spring as it pushed to be included in the Covid Corporate Financing Facility (CCFF), a scheme under which the Bank of England loans hundreds of millions of pounds a time to large companies. Greensill s appeals for rule changes were rebuffed.