Latest News

15/6/2026

The Economics of Healthcare: Why Insurance Systems Succeed or Struggle

Healthcare debates are often framed as political arguments about public versus private provision.  In reality, the underlying issue is more technical and more important: the stability of any healthcare system depends on how risk is shared across the population.  

Today

Highland Inward Migration: What’s Really Happening and What It Means for Caithness

The Highlands are experiencing the biggest demographic shift since the oil boom.  But unlike the 1970s, this wave isn’t driven by industry it’s driven by housing economics, remote work, lifestyle migration, and the collapse of affordability in the Central Belt and the south of England.  

Today

When HMOs Come North: How Caithness Is Losing Homes to a Quiet Housing Gold Rush

The rise of Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) across Caithness is no longer a fringe issue.  It is reshaping the local housing market in ways that most national policymakers never see and certainly never feel.  

Today

Drone use poised to soar as FAA homes in on rule change allowing pilots to fly them out of sight

Today, almost anyone who flies a drone must maintain visual contact with it at all times, a practice known as visual line of sight.  This requirement severely restricts how far craft can fly.  

Today

Why the EU economy should embrace digital currencies to become less dependent on the US

Compared to other parts of the world, the EU on the whole has been fairly reluctant to embrace digital economic innovation.  The bloc has been suspicious of cryptocurrencies, and treated them as a potential threat to a financial system where stability is paramount.  

Today

Victory, Defeat... or Simply Moving On?

As reports emerge that President Donald Trump may be prepared to compromise on some of America's original objectives in order to bring the conflict with Iran to an end, commentators are already asking whether the United States is backing down or simply recognising the limits of military power.   Critics argue that Washington entered the conflict with ambitious goals: to curb Iran's military capabilities, force major concessions over its nuclear programme, and restore long-term stability in the region.  

Today : Advisory / Counseling Services

When the Money Moves South: How HIE’s Shrinking Budget Has Hit Caithness and Why “Record Funding” Doesn’t Mean What It Used To

For decades, Highlands and Islands Enterprise was the economic backbone of the far north.  It wasn’t perfect, but it was one of the few institutions that understood the basic truth of life in Caithness: distance costs money, and if the state doesn’t step in, the market won’t.  

Today : Local Authority

How Caithness Can Strengthen Its Case for Major Capital Investment in an Era of Shrinking Budgets

Caithness has reached a moment where the old assumptions about public investment no longer hold.  For decades, the region could rely on a three‑pillar system: HIE to drive economic development, Scottish Enterprise and national programmes to support growth, and Highland Council to deliver the infrastructure that underpins daily life.  

Today

 
Pension saving plummets when employees move into self-employment

More than three-quarters of employees who consistently saved into a pension stop doing so when they move into self-employment.   Currently, only around one-in-five self-employed workers save into a private pension, compared with around four-in-five employees.  

Today

 
Social media bans risk excluding children from important opportunities rather than tackling harms, new report finds

Nearly half (45 per cent) of the children surveyed in a new report from researchers at LSE.  The University of Oslo said age-based restrictions on social media would not make them feel any safer online.  

Today

It is time to permanently increase taxes on oil and gas companies

The dramatic spike in oil and gas prices following the US-Israel war on Iran has prompted governments around the world to implement or consider higher taxes on oil and gas companies.  Assessing the case for these taxes Ashfaq Khalfan argues that this is an opportune moment to enact permanent taxes, rather than temporary windfall ones, as a regulatory tool to incentivise investment in renewable energy.  

Today

The Third Pillar Cracks: How Cuts to HIE, Scottish Economic Development, and Council Budgets Threaten Caithness and What It Means for the £100 Million Thurso Schools Project

Caithness has always lived at the intersection of three funding pillars: Highlands and Islands Enterprise, national economic development programmes, and Highland Council’s capital and revenue budgets.  When all three are healthy, the region can absorb shocks, plan for the future, and deliver the kind of long‑term investment that keeps communities stable.  

Today

Has Scotland Changed the Way It Creates Jobs? Why Caithness Feels the Shift More Than Most

For most of the post‑war era, Scotland’s economic development model was built on a simple idea: if you want jobs, you invest in places.  You build infrastructure, support local firms, attract new employers, and anchor work where people already live.  

Today

When International Law Meets Military Power: Is Control of the World's Sea Lanes Becoming the New Economic Weapon?

For centuries, international trade has depended on one simple principle: ships should be able to travel freely through the world's oceans.  That freedom has underpinned global commerce, kept supply chains moving and helped create the interconnected world economy we know today.  

Yesterday

Oil Price In Dramatic Price Drop

The sharp fall has surprised many people because only days ago traders were worried that conflict in the Middle East would keep oil above $100 a barrel.  Instead, Brent crude has fallen to around $87 a barrel, its lowest level in nearly two months.  

Yesterday

The World's First Trillionaire

As of Friday 12 June 2026, Elon Musk has become the world's first publicly recognised trillionaire.   The milestone was reached after the hugely successful initial public offering (IPO) of SpaceX.  

Yesterday

The World's First Trillionaire: What Elon Musk's Record Fortune Says About the Modern Economy

For centuries, the world's richest individuals have symbolised the economic power of their age.  During the Industrial Revolution it was the railway and steel magnates.  

Yesterday

 
Retirement Living Standards update shows the nation is not saving enough

As the Pensions Commission considers how to increase the nation’s retirement savings, Pensions UK’s updated Retirement Living Standards (RLS) underline that many people are not saving enough.   The RLS are there to help people picture what lifestyle they expect in retirement and the costs associated with three different levels.  

Yesterday

Defence versus Welfare? The UK's Budget Debate Is Far More Complicated Than That

As Britain faces growing international tensions and pressure to increase defence spending, politicians have increasingly framed the debate as a choice between funding the armed forces or maintaining the welfare system.  It is a simple message, but is it an accurate one? The Resolution Foundation has challenged this popular narrative, arguing that the comparison is both misleading and incomplete.  

Yesterday

The Price of Prestige: Why Even the Biggest Sporting Events Are Now Struggling to Fill Their Seats

For decades, the world’s great sporting spectacles could rely on one thing above all else.  A full house.