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" ... Both Bloomberg and Thomson Reuters have now publicly addressed the centralisation of their reporting tools. This is aimed at allowing compliance officers to monitor all instant message chats among traders, and to be alerted to problem behaviours and keywords. ... "
" ... Investing in innovation should play an important part of local industrial strategies focused on key areas solving societal challenges such as clean growth, health innovation and food security. The pledge for increased and geographically better-balanced R&D expenditure is more important than ever, and so is a reversal of years of centralisation and austerity cuts, so that councils have greater capacity and revenue funding to plan and react faster during a crisis. Plans to locate a HM Treasury office to the North East should be prioritised along with locating other central agencies in regional offices to prepare and deliver economic recovery in partnership with universities, local enterprise partnerships (LEPs) and local authorities. ... "
" ... The Nobel Laureate Joe Stiglitz has a new book out looking at the euro and his basic conclusion about that is entirely correct - it's a disaster. However, his solution is that it should be broken into two or three separate currencies, perhaps until some time that the whole can be remade again. And that's wrong I'm afraid. The solution is not to break it into two or three, nor even it's original constituent parts (some 18 I believe?). Rather, it is to reverse some centuries of economic centralisation in currencies and move to more than those original 18. I would even argue that the British pound should be split up into at least three and possibly more parts. This flows from an analysis of the basic idea at issue here, optimal currency areas. ... "
" ... The lure of London is in its centralisation of some of the best job prospects throughout the U.K., and most of the major businesses throughout the city will still retain their central offices after this pandemic is over. Many will no doubt embrace more flexible work options where possible, but the bottom line is that office, and the many subsidiaries and services surrounding it, is here to stay; and for as long as it remains to generate jobs, London will become a magnet for those seeking work. ... "