For weeks the global economy has appeared to survive the Iran crisis better than many feared. Petrol stations remain open, aircraft are still flying and supermarket shelves are still stocked.
From today (12 May 2026), only learner drivers can book and manage their own driving test - part of a crackdown on exploitation by third-party services. The Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) has introduced new rules for car driving test bookings, putting learners firmly in control of their own booking.
The decision by the Scottish National Investment Bank to channel major investment into large-scale housing funds highlights the growing role of institutional investors in tackling Scotland’s housing shortage while also seeking long-term financial returns. Recent reports have highlighted a £50 million investment by the Bank into affordable housing initiatives linked to major private investment managers, part of a wider strategy to boost the supply of energy-efficient rental homes across Scotland and the wider UK.
For most households, mortgage rates feel like a simple question: Are they going up or down? But behind every shift in a lender’s pricing sheet lies a deeper story and one that begins not in a bank branch or a mortgage broker’s office, but in the bond markets. And over the past few weeks, those markets have been sending a clear and uncomfortable message that UK mortgage rates are under renewed upward pressure, and the hoped‑for easing in 2026 is drifting further out of reach.
UK and France to host first meeting of Defence Ministers to advance the Strait of Hormuz multinational mission. This comes as HMS Dragon, one of the UK’s most capable warships, will forward deploy to the region.
Caithness is heading into another 12–18 months of elevated living costs, driven by fuel, food, energy, and mortgage pressures that hit rural households harder than the Scottish average. Even if UK inflation falls on paper, the Caithness lived reality will stay higher because distance, transport, and weak local competition amplify every national shock.
Oil has crept back up towards — and in some trading briefly above — $106 a barrel mainly because traders now fear the Middle East situation is deteriorating again after hopes of a breakthrough between the US and Iran faded. The biggest factor remains the continuing disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important oil shipping routes.
UK gilt yields are surging again today, the pound is slipping. This combination increases the risk of higher UK interest rates, or at least delays any cuts.
UK businesses are being urged to strengthen their cyber defences against fast-evolving AI-enabled threats. Businesses encouraged to sign Cyber Resilience Pledge to strengthen defences against fast-evolving AI-enabled threats.
Caithness cannot “fix” its housing crisis with the same tools used in the Central Belt. The county needs a rural‑specific, infrastructure first, builder capacity‑led recovery plan not more targets, consultations, or glossy PDFs.
Alcohol‑specific deaths fell sharply in 2024, dropping to 9,809 deaths across the UK the lowest since 2021 and the first meaningful decline since 2018. But rates remain highest in Scotland and Northern Ireland, and men continue to die at roughly twice the rate of women.
The UK housing shortage is driven by a combination of long‑term structural failures rather than any single cause. Across multiple authoritative sources, the evidence points to chronic undersupply, rising demand, high construction costs, loss of social housing, and planning bottlenecks as the core drivers.
At 900am today the oil price has risen again to almost $105. The oil market is in a “yo-yo” phase right now because traders are reacting hour by hour to conflicting news about war risks, supply shortages, peace negotiations and the wider economy.
Moneyfacts UK Mortgage Trends Treasury Report data reveals that despite mortgage turmoil easing in April, first-time buyers remain under pressure from reduced choice and stretched affordability. Mortgage product choice has contracted by around 10% since the start of March, with higher loan-to-value deals (10% or less deposit or equity) falling by 14%, a blow to first-time buyers in particular.
Based on the latest published data, both the Scottish Government and the UK Government are currently nowhere near the build‑rates required to meet their own housing targets. The gap between targets and actual new starts is now so large that without major policy, planning, and funding changes those promises are indeed “pie in the sky”.
If Edinburgh Airport goes ahead with the new £8.50 charge for 10 minutes, it will become one of the most expensive airports in the UK outside London, but not the outright most expensive overall. Edinburgh will effectively be tied as the most expensive airport outside London for a standard 10-minute drop-off.
The financial pressures facing both the Scottish Government and councils could create major risks for ambitious long-term capital programmes such as The Highland Council’s Highland Investment Plan (HIP), including the proposed £100 million redevelopment of Thurso High School into a major community campus. However, the picture is complicated because projects like Thurso are also politically and economically important for the region.
The rapid growth of artificial intelligence, data centres and advanced computing demand is beginning to affect the wider technology market far beyond gaming consoles. Governments, councils, banks, universities, hospitals and large companies are all facing rising costs for servers, networking equipment, storage systems and high-performance computer chips.
The next Scottish government is likely to face some of the toughest financial decisions since devolution. Economists, the Fraser of Allander Institute, the Institute for Fiscal Studies and the Scottish Fiscal Commission have all warned that Scotland is heading towards a funding gap approaching £5 billion by the end of the parliamentary term unless spending is cut, taxes rise, or economic growth improves sharply.
There is growing evidence that UK employers are becoming more reluctant to hire younger workers, particularly in entry-level sectors such as retail, hospitality and leisure, as employment costs rise sharply. The evidence comes from official data, business surveys, economists, recruitment firms and parliamentary hearings.