In an increasingly volatile world, oil insecurity remains one of the most persistent threats to economic stability. Recent geopolitical tensions especially in major oil-producing regions have once again exposed how fragile global energy systems can be.
Borrowers are in limbo once again, yet any hold to the Bank of England Base Rate (BBR) must not deter them from seeking a deal, according to Moneyfactscompare.co.uk analysis. Mortgage market analysis The biggest high street banks have all moved to cut selected fixed rates over the past two weeks, which includes Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds Bank, NatWest and Santander, all catching up to swap rate movements.
According to the ONS, youth unemployment has jumped to uncomfortable levels, higher than the EU average. Grace Lordan untangles the many causes behind the rise, including AI and a rising minimum wage, and offers proposals for government action.
The Scottish fishing industry remains one of the most important sectors in the country’s rural and coastal economy, but it is also undergoing a long period of structural change. While the industry still lands hundreds of thousands of tonnes of fish each year and generates significant export value, the composition of the fleet, the geography of activity, and the balance between different types of fishing are all shifting.
Global oil markets have once again moved sharply higher, with prices climbing back above the psychologically important $100 per barrel mark. This latest surge is being driven less by traditional supply and demand dynamics and more by geopolitical tensions, particularly in the Middle East.
The UK rental market is undergoing a period of significant transformation, and much of the public discussion has focused on whether landlords are leaving the sector altogether. While there is truth in that narrative, the reality is more nuanced.
In November 2024, the Royal College of Anaesthetists (RCoA), in collaboration with the NIHR Central London Patient Safety Research Collaboration and University College London, embarked on a landmark "snapshot" study. Known as PACE2024, this seven-day evaluation across 91 NHS trusts laid bare a critical inefficiency in modern healthcare: the rate at which planned surgeries were failing to reach the operating table.
The outlook for UK interest rates has shifted noticeably in recent months, leaving homeowners, buyers, and investors trying to make sense of an increasingly uncertain landscape. After a period where steady rate cuts seemed likely, economists are now far less confident.
For much of the past few decades, wool—once a cornerstone of the British rural economy—was seen as a declining commodity. Prices were low, demand was weak, and many farmers treated wool as a by-product rather than a primary source of income.
Europe’s wind industry used its 22–23 April 2026 platform to deliver one of its clearest messages yet. Europe cannot secure its future without homegrown electricity, faster electrification, and stronger protection of its energy infrastructure.
Across the United Kingdom, there is a growing sense not always dramatic, but persistent that everyday life has become a little harder, a little less reliable, and a little more worn around the edges than it used to be. It shows up not in a single crisis, but in dozens of small, cumulative changes: public toilets quietly closing, bins collected less often, playgrounds left unrepaired, potholes multiplying on local roads, longer waits for NHS treatment, rising stamp prices alongside fewer deliveries, and pubs disappearing from high streets and villages.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has examined the UK’s Help to Buy schemes—primarily the equity loan scheme (2013–2023) and the mortgage guarantee scheme (2013–2016; reintroduced 2021). Their analysis shows that while these schemes were designed to improve affordability for first‑time buyers and stimulate housebuilding, their actual impact was uneven, limited, and often regressive.
Understanding Voter Behaviour, Campaign Strategy, and the Changing Role of Political Communication. Election leaflets have been a staple of democratic campaigning for more than a century.
Scotland is entering a period of profound fiscal constraint, and few analysts have articulated the scale and structure of this challenge as clearly as David Phillips, Associate Director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS). His recent commentary paints a picture of a government facing slower funding growth, rising structural pressures, and increasingly difficult trade‑offs.
The United Kingdom is in the middle of a quiet but high-stakes industrial transformation. Over the next decade, it is attempting to build a domestic battery manufacturing base large enough to support its transition to electric vehicles.
The UK borrowed £132 billion in the past financial year (2025-26), £20 billion below the £152 billion in borrowed in 2024-25, and £0.7 billion below the OBR’s March forecast. But conflict in the Middle East risks putting the brakes on the slow consolidation in the public finances apparent in today’s figures, the Resolution Foundation said on Thursday 23 April 2026.
In an era of complex economic indicators and abstract inflation metrics, a new contender has emerged from an unlikely place: the pub. The “Guinndex,” a project that tracks the price of a pint of Guinness across the UK, offers a refreshingly tangible way to understand how prices are changing and how uneven those changes really are.
With oil prices skyrocketing following the US and Israel’s bombing of Iran, and the subsequent closure of the Strait of Hormuz, motorists around the world have been looking for ways to save money. Improvements in electric vehicle (EV) technology, combined with the high price of oil, mean that the tipping point at which most consumers start ditching their petrol cars for electric ones may well have been reached.
A recent BBC analysis (23 April 2026) raises an uncomfortable but important question at the heart of Scottish politics. Are political parties being fully honest about the state of Scotland’s public finances? At a time when competing visions for the country’s future dominate the debate, the article suggests that the numbers underpinning those visions are often far less clear than they appear.
CPI inflation jumped to 3.3 per cent in March, up from 3.0 per cent in February – in line with market expectations – in the first sign of war-driven price rises feeding through to British households, the Resolution Foundation said this week. The rise in March was largely driven by petrol prices, which have increased sharply since the outbreak of the war.