Decisions. We make so many in our lives. From the moment we wake up to the moment we go to bed, our days are filled with opportunities to make decisions. Some are grand in scope, determining the sort of life we will pursue in different seasons; we choose this particular job, to start or end
Regarding Sam Leith’s column, thank goodness someone is honest enough to come clean about the real rationale for working from home (Opinion, May 7). Forget the concocted justifications of attraction and retention etc, the real attraction is more money for less work. What’s not to like about that? No wonder unions and academics are such
The runaway house price growth of the past two years is set to slow as the wider economy braces for a period of stagflation, according to housing economists and analysts. Warning lights have flashed across the economy in the past fortnight. Inflation is running at a 40-year high and faces further upward pressure from a
Stocks are being repriced across the board as the sell-off on Wall Street intensifies. Technology companies, especially unprofitable and richly valued names, have been hit hardest. Yet even companies that boast sales growth and rising profits have not been spared. Deere, the US tractor maker, turned in a solid performance on Friday. It overcame supply
Early in the pandemic, there was hope that humanity might draw a lesson or two from our renewed sense of fragility. Existential threats like global warming would be taken more seriously, supply chains rejigged, healthcare services strengthened and critical workers held in higher esteem. So far, however, the biggest change has been in what we