BT has gone further to demonstrate its value to wider society by building its strategy around the restoration of its “national champion” status. There’s a bitter irony, then, that this is the moment that Labour has chosen to attack it Despite significant misgivings, a little over three years ago, I went …
Read More »Royal Mail wins high court battle to stop postal strike
The Royal Mail has won a High Court battle to block what would have been the first national postal strike in a decade. The Communication Workers Union (CWU), who called the Christmas strike, condemed the injunction as an “utter outrage”. The union said it would appeal against the decision after …
Read More »Crispin Odey’s wife to chair the Jupiter fund he shorts
A top hedge fund manager known as one half of the City’s “Posh and Becks” has been appointed as chairman of a fund house her husband Crispin Odey has been betting against. Nichola Pease – whose family helped found Barclays Bank, where her brother-in-law John Varley was formerly chief executive – will take over at …
Read More »High stakes for Northern Irish businesses ahead of Brexit deal vote
Flurrybridge Enterprise Centre is ground zero for Brexit on the island of Ireland. Situated in South Armagh, just yards north of the border, it is home to businesses that sustain almost 300 livelihoods, many of them by shuttling goods along the east coast artery between Belfast and Dublin. Travelling over …
Read More »McKinsey moves to new digital-savvy London home
The management consultancy McKinsey has abandoned its headquarters in London’s fusty St James’s area, as it looks to ditch its image as a provider of clipboard-wielding suits and rebrand as a digital-savvy agent of change. McKinsey has been based for the last 25 years in offices on Jermyn Street, an …
Read More »Labour will vow to bring billions of pounds of public services back in house in fresh blow to outsourcers
Labour is set to mount a fresh assault on business with the shadow chancellor expected to set out plans to bring billions of pounds worth of outsourced public services back in house if it wins power. John McDonnell is understood to have drawn up draft laws that would force government …
Read More »Train franchising may have ‘had its day’ but the wait goes on for answers on rail reform
On 9 October 1990, just weeks before the downfall of Margaret Thatcher, the then transport secretary Cecil Parkinson addressed the Conservative Party conference in Bournemouth. On the future of British Rail, he was unequivocal. “The question now is not about whether we should privatise it, but how and when,” he said. The “when” …
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