Technical study on suitable areas in Scotland for new nuclear published. Scotland has areas with “high potential” for new nuclear development from a technical perspective, according to a new siting study by the government’s nuclear delivery body.
A major new report from the international delivery expert Parcelhero finds AI has moved from boardroom experiment to operational backbone across global supply chains – and the transformation is accelerating faster than anyone predicted. A new industry report, Putting the AI into Supply ChAIns, reveals there is a seismic shift under way in UK logistics.
A recent survey by Opinium has found that 34% of holidaymakers have noticed an increase in potential scams on social media platforms over the past year. Over 50% of holiday scams reported last year originated on social media, with many adverts fraudulently using logos from travel protection agencies such as ATOL, ABTA, or ABTOT to appear legitimate.
If everything seems to be made in China these days, it’s probably because it is. China manufacturers roughly the same amount of goods as the US, Japan, and Germany combined.
In 2026, Kevin Warsh steps into the most powerful economic role on earth Federal Reserve Chairman inheriting America's staggering $39 trillion debt. World-renowned economist Steve Keen, who famously predicted the 2008 global financial crisis, delivers a sobering warning: Warsh is "cut from the same cloth" as every Fed chair before him.
Young people born from the mid-1990s onwards are enjoying higher living standards than their millennial predecessors so far in their careers, in part by becoming the stay-at-home generation, according to new Resolution Foundation research published (26 June 2926). They’re coming home – supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) funded Centre for Population Change, as part of the Connecting Generations research programme – uncovers a mixed picture of the living standards of today’s under-30s, all in the context of the huge social change that is the shift to living with parents deep into adulthood.
The government is launching a 12-week call for evidence asking the public to help shape the future of National Lottery Good Cause funding. The government is launching a 12-week call for evidence asking the public to help shape the future of National Lottery Good Cause funding Since 1994, players of the National Lottery have generated over £53 billion for good causes across the UK, funding everything from Olympic and Paralympic champions and iconic institutions to local youth clubs and community halls For 12 weeks, anyone can take part in the ‘National Lottery Good Causes: Fund What Matters to You’ call for evidence.
The media thinks government debt will cause the next financial crash. I think they’re looking in entirely the wrong place.
teachers in Scotland are generally still paid more than teachers in England, although the gap varies depending on experience and location. The UK Government has announced a two-year pay deal for teachers in England: 3.5% from September 2026 3.0% from September 2027 This is a cumulative increase of around 6.6% over two years.
The Scottish Government’s intentions to reform post-school education and skills lack a clear delivery plan. Progress is slow.
Firms have a critical role to play in hiring Britain out of its NEETs crisis – but targeted subsidies, rather than expensive tax breaks, are the most cost-effective way of supporting employers to get young people into work, according to new Resolution Foundation analysis, published on Monday. Take a chance on me warns that Britain’s NEETs crisis – the number of young people not in employment, education or training (NEET) passed one million earlier this year – risks scarring the living standards of a generation.
For years, we assumed that most goods would become cheaper, deliveries would arrive on time and borrowing would remain relatively affordable. That world may be changing.
Britain has spent decades worrying about inflation, interest rates and economic growth. Yet the next great economic challenge may not be financial at all.
Every so often, the global economy doesn’t just change direction—it changes character. The post-war era was defined by rebuilding and industrial expansion.
For much of the twentieth century, the world's great economic battles centred on one commodity—oil. Nations went to extraordinary lengths to secure it.
The Scottish Government is right to highlight that there has been measurable progress, particularly in reducing the number of people waiting more than a year. However, when you examine the underlying Public Health Scotland statistics, a more nuanced picture emerges.
These projects come from National Grid ESO’s Pathway to 2030, Beyond 2030, and Ofgem approvals. They represent the largest expansion of the UK’s electricity network since the 1960s.
Artificial intelligence is no longer just a software revolution—it’s becoming one of the largest physical infrastructure build‑outs in modern history. Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Meta, Oracle, OpenAI, xAI and others are collectively committing hundreds of billions of dollars per year to AI data‑center expansion.
The latest Scottish Government local government finance figures reveal a story that is both reassuring and worrying. Councils are not collapsing financially, nor are they suddenly awash with cash.
For years, Scotland’s councils have been operating under financial pressure. Budgets have risen, but so too have costs, demand, and statutory obligations.