Martin Vander Weyer

Martin Vander Weyer is business editor of The Spectator. He writes the weekly Any Other Business column.

Cheap shots and uncosted bribes are drowning out vision, wisdom and optimism

25 April 2015 9:00 am

The interesting thing about Labour’s pledge to abolish non-dom tax status — a squib designed to trap Tories into expressing…

Cheap shots and uncosted bribes are drowning out vision, wisdom and optimism

23 April 2015 1:00 pm

The interesting thing about Labour’s pledge to abolish non-dom tax status — a squib designed to trap Tories into expressing…

Did the £20 million Norwegian’s pay row make BG cheaper for Shell?

18 April 2015 9:00 am

Helge Lund was widely expected to go into domestic politics when he ended his successful tenure as head of Statoil,…

Did the £20 million Norwegian’s pay row make BG cheaper for Shell?

16 April 2015 1:00 pm

Helge Lund was widely expected to go into domestic politics when he ended his successful tenure as head of Statoil,…

Switch over to the Greek debt drama: the final episode must be coming shortly

11 April 2015 9:00 am

Bored with the election? Switch over to the Greek debt drama. In this week’s cliffhanger, silver-tongued finance minister Yanis Varoufakis…

Switch over to the Greek debt drama: the final episode must be coming shortly

9 April 2015 1:00 pm

Bored with the election? Switch over to the Greek debt drama. In this week’s cliffhanger, silver-tongued finance minister Yanis Varoufakis…

A view from the departure lounge: why Heathrow expansion may never happen

4 April 2015 9:00 am

Easter is a good time to talk about airports — or perhaps a bad time, if you bought your Spectator…

A view from the departure lounge: why Heathrow expansion may never happen

2 April 2015 2:00 pm

Easter is a good time to talk about airports — or perhaps a bad time, if you bought your Spectator…

Why this long-awaited FTSE100 peak deserves only a small cheer

28 March 2015 9:00 am

The FTSE100 index has at last breached 7,000, surpassing its peak of 30 December 1999 and provoking moderate celebration among…

Why this long-awaited FTSE100 peak deserves only a small cheer

26 March 2015 3:00 pm

The FTSE100 index has at last breached 7,000, surpassing its peak of 30 December 1999 and provoking moderate celebration among…

A truly radical review of business rates is worth more than all the Budget spin

21 March 2015 9:00 am

Of all the measures talked up ahead of the Budget, the reannouncement of a ‘radical’ review of the business rates…

A truly radical review of business rates is worth more than all the Budget spin

19 March 2015 3:00 pm

Of all the measures talked up ahead of the Budget, the reannouncement of a ‘radical’ review of the business rates…

Something useful for your Budget, George: fast-track approval for challenger banks

14 March 2015 9:00 am

In my Yorkshire town of Helmsley the NatWest branch, originally an outpost of Beckett & Co of Leeds, has closed…

Advice to StanChart’s new chief: reputation is even tougher to manage than financial risk

7 March 2015 9:00 am

One day you’re an elder statesman, chairing top committees and pontificating on Question Time, and the next you’re out in…

Just in time, Osborne answers Labour’s 50p tax trick with a bumper monthly surplus

28 February 2015 9:00 am

Last week’s public borrowing and tax-receipt figures, headlined ‘Chancellor hails biggest monthly surplus in seven years’, received considerably less attention…

Put the water cannons on standby and your money on a swift Grexit

21 February 2015 9:00 am

‘Will Greece exit the eurozone in 2015?’ Paddy Power was pricing ‘yes’ at 3-to-1 on Tuesday, with 5-to-2 on another…

Green must answer for HSBC’s faults — but he’s another victim of big banking’s perils

14 February 2015 9:00 am

Stephen Green — the former trade minister Lord Green of Hurstpier-point, who became this week’s political punchbag— was always a…

Unwanted consequences: will cheap oil lead to a Labour election victory?

7 February 2015 9:00 am

BP’s profits are down, and the oil giant is slashing up to $6 billion out of its investment plan for…

Muck and brass

7 February 2015 9:00 am

The whole idea of capitalism, according to Enlightenment philosophers, was that it created a positive spiral of moral behaviour. ‘Concern…

Austerity really is a virtue, whatever the Greeks think

31 January 2015 9:00 am

The only question I remember from my Oxford moral philosophy paper was ‘What is integrity and is it a virtue?’…

Cuckoo clocks, Chinese dragons and magic needles: the pros and cons of currency pegs

24 January 2015 9:00 am

The Swiss National Bank usually ticks away as quietly as one of its nation’s more expensive timepieces, but when the…

Prizes for Mick Cash of RMT and Dave Lewis of Tesco – but praise for Jon Moulton too

17 January 2015 9:00 am

Mixed results for the Brits at the Golden Globes, but I’m pleased to announce that my Golden Monkey Wrench for…

This time round, the eurozone looks robust enough to get rid of its Greek problem

10 January 2015 9:00 am

Ever since European Central Bank president Mario Draghi declared himself ready, in July 2012, ‘to do whatever it takes to…

Will 2015 witness the Triumph of Probity and Prudence? I’m not betting on it

3 January 2015 9:00 am

You might recall a column I once wrote about a party at the Wallace Collection. It took place in late…

Can’t afford Pesto or Boris? Or even Ant and Dec? Try the bloke from The Spectator

13 December 2014 9:00 am

To Brighton, to address a conference of property investors. Unusually, I find myself programmed alongside both Gerard Lyons, City economist…