Press kit
Everything a journalist or editor needs to write about Prosperity 2030 accurately: the report itself, the canonical fiscal figures, author bios, and brand assets.
The report
The full structured report at report.prosperity2030.uk: sections, policies, appendices, references, and downloadable PDFs.
Report coming soon →Fact sheet
One-page fact sheet built on the canonical figures: revenue, programme cost, and remaining fiscal space across the five-year window.
Fact sheet (coming soon)Author bios
Short and long biographies for Henrietta Moore (Director, IGP) and Andrew Percy (Senior Research Fellow), suitable for attribution in published pieces.
Bios (coming soon)Boilerplate
Standard descriptions of Prosperity 2030, the Social Prosperity Network, and UCL IGP, for use in publication footers and endnotes. Short and long versions below.
Jump to boilerplate ↓Brand assets
Prosperity 2030 wordmark and IGP/UCL lockups in SVG and PNG, with usage notes.
Assets (coming soon)Headline figures
~£102B new annual revenue · ~£65B of new Universal Services and structural reforms · ~£38B annual fiscal space · zero new borrowing across the five-year window.
Cite the report for the full breakdown.
Boilerplate
Standard descriptions for use in articles, endnotes, and credits. Each block is written to drop straight into copy without editing.
One-line credit
Prosperity 2030 is a research programme of the Social Prosperity Network, hosted by the UCL Institute for Global Prosperity.
Short (≈40 words)
Prosperity 2030 is a research programme of the Social Prosperity Network, a network hosted by the UCL Institute for Global Prosperity, authored by Henrietta Moore and Andrew Percy. The full report is published at prosperity2030.uk.
Long (≈90 words)
Prosperity 2030 is a coordinated five-year reform programme for the UK that combines Universal Services welfare with a National Contributions reform of income taxation. The signature design move is sequencing reductions in the cost of living to offset increases in taxation, with zero new borrowing across the parliament. It is a research programme of the Social Prosperity Network (SPN), authored by Henrietta Moore and Andrew Percy. SPN is a network hosted by the UCL Institute for Global Prosperity (UCL IGP), part of The Bartlett at University College London. The full report, supporting analysis, and press materials are published at prosperity2030.uk.
About UCL IGP
The UCL Institute for Global Prosperity (IGP) is a research institute at University College London, part of The Bartlett. It works to redefine prosperity and to design the policy and institutional arrangements that deliver the conditions for people and planet to flourish. www.ucl.ac.uk/bartlett/global-prosperity
Need a variant for a specific publication or word count? press@p2030.org can supply it.
Fact-checking and quick queries
For fact-checks, figure verification, or a quick comment under deadline: press@p2030.org reaches Fran Harvey and Andrew Percy directly. For broader media co-ordination, contact Higginson Strategy.
Notes on terminology
- The public label for the service set is Universal Services. The UBS label is not used in this report.
- Service names appear in full (e.g. Universal Energy Service) on first mention in any piece.
- Community Food Centre meals are free at the point of access, not "subsidised" or "low-cost".
- Cited experts are academic and institutional voices cited in the report, not "validators" or "endorsements".