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Health unions call 3.3% pay rise for 1.4m NHS staff in England ‘an insult’

about 22 hours ago
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Health unions have criticised the 3.3% pay rise imposed on 1.4 million NHS staff in England as “an insult”, with one threatening to strike over the below-inflation award.They described the increase announced by Wes Streeting, the health secretary, as a “betrayal” of the frontline workers – including nurses, midwives and porters – who will receive it for 2026-27.The 3.

3% is less than inflation, which stood at 3.4% last month, but above the rate of inflation that is expected during the next financial year.In a written statement to MPs Streeting stressed that the 3.3% was higher than the Office for Budgetary Responsibility’s forecast that inflation would rise by 2.2% in 2026-27.

Unions responded angrily and said the award would not help NHS staff recover from below-inflation pay rises in recent years having led to a fall in the real-terms value of their salaries,They accused the government of acting in bad faith for not fulfilling a promise of direct talks about the size of next year’s salary increase and instead deciding to impose the 3,3%,The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and Royal College of Midwives (RCM) called the 3,3% “an insult” because it did not keep pace with the true cost of rising prices.

“Unless inflation falls, the government is forcing a very real pay cut on its NHS workers.This knife-edge gameplaying is no way to treat people who prop up a system in crisis,” said Prof Nicola Ranger, the RCN’s general secretary and chief executive.The RCN will wait to see what pay awards other NHS staff and groups of public sector workers get for next year before deciding what action, if any, to take.“Nursing staff will not tolerate the disrespect of other years, when we were bottom of the pile,” she added.Gill Walton, the RCM’s general secretary, said: “This real-terms pay cut is an insult to midwives who work 100,000 unpaid hours every week just to keep maternity services running.

Our members are sick and tired of these broken promises to sort out pay and staffing and their anger is justified,”Unite was the only union to explicitly threaten to strike over an award it described as “an act of political cowardice and financial betrayal of NHS workers”,“It beggars belief that a Labour government should seek to ride roughshod over the health unions when deciding on NHS pay,For too long NHS workers have been overworked, underpaid and undervalued,” said Sharon Graham, its general secretary,Richard Munn, Unite’s national officer for health, said the union would consult its members once fuller details of the deal were available.

Ministers would need to use forthcoming talks with unions on long-promised structural reforms to NHS pay to address a series of grievances “or else members will be left with little option other than industrial action”, Munn said.Streeting told MPs the 3.3% was higher than the 2.5% rise that the government told the NHS pay review body last autumn was the most it could afford for 2025-26.The success of NHS trusts and integrated care boards in staying within budget this year, as a result of implementing savings programmes, had freed up money that represented “the foundations of the government’s ability to fund this within the [NHS’s] existing settlement”, he added.

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Reeves appoints higher pay advocate to fight skills shortages as chief economic adviser

Rachel Reeves has appointed a labour market expert who has repeatedly called for better pay and conditions in key sectors, such as social care, to reduce the UK’s reliance on migrant workers as her new chief economic adviser.Prof Brian Bell, who chairs the independent Migration Advisory Committee (MAC), which advises the government, has been announced as the new chief economic adviser in the Treasury – a senior civil service role.He will take up the post just as the UK economy is adjusting to a plunge in net migration, which fell by more than two-thirds, to 204,000, in the year to June 2025.Some economists have predicted a further decline, towards zero net migration – but Bell rejects that forecast, expecting it to bounce back towards 300,000 a year by the end of the decade.A professor of economics at Kings College London, Bell has used his role on the MAC to make the point that the “skills shortages” bemoaned by UK employers may often reflect the failure to offer good enough terms and conditions to domestic workers

about 2 hours ago
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Trump ‘plans to roll back’ some metal tariffs; US inflation weaker than expected in January - business live

Time to wrap up…US inflation moderated in January to 2.4%, an easing after Donald Trump’s tariffs triggered price fluctuations last year.Prices rose 0.2% from December to January, according to data released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday measuring the consumer price index (CPI), which measures the price of a basket of goods and services. Core CPI, which strips out the volatile food and energy industries, went up 0

about 2 hours ago
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Anthropic raises $30bn in latest round, valuing Claude bot maker at $380bn

Anthropic, the US AI startup behind the Claude chatbot, has raised $30bn (£22bn) in a funding round that more than doubled its valuation to $380bn.The company’s previous funding round in September achieved a value of $183bn, with further improvements in the technology since then spurring even greater investor interest.The fundraising was announced amid a series of stock market moves against industries that face disruption from the latest models, including software, trucking and logistics, wealth management and commercial property services.The funding round, led by the Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC and the hedge fund Coatue Management, is among the largest private fundraising deals on record.“Anthropic is the clear category leader in enterprise AI,” said Choo Yong Cheen, the chief investment officer of private equity at GIC

about 6 hours ago
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How to deal with the “Claude crash”: Relx should keep buying back shares, then buy more | Nils Pratley

As the FTSE 100 index bobs along close to all-time highs, it is easy to miss the quiet share price crash in one corner of the market. It’s got a name – the “Claude crash”, referencing the plug-in legal products added by the AI firm Anthropic to its Claude Cowork office assistant.This launch, or so you would think from the panicked stock market reaction in the past few weeks, marks the moment when the AI revolution rips chunks out of some of the UK’s biggest public companies – those in the dull but successful “data” game, including Relx, the London Stock Exchange Group, Experian, Sage and Informa.Relx, the former Reed Elsevier, whose brands include the Lancet and LexisNexis, is the most intriguing in that list. The company’s description of itself contains at least five words to provoke a yawn – “a global provider of information-based analytics and decision tools for professional and business customers” – but the pre-Claude share price was a thing of wonder

about 23 hours ago
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Winter Olympics 2026: Klæbo seals treble; Australian snowboarding gold; GB drought goes on – live

Klaebo is now the joint most decorated Winter Olympian in history! And there are three more chances of gold to come, in the men’s relay, men’s team sprint and 50k marathon.France’s Mathis wins silver, and Einar Hedegart bronze. Britain’s Andrew Musgrave finishes a fantastic sixth, bare arms and all.Speed skating: there’s a gold medal waiting for the fastest man to cover 10,000m of ice. It takes over 12 minutes to complete so a balm to those overstimulated by the scream of the sliding events

about 1 hour ago
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Itoje calls for ‘bulletproof’ England approach to slay their Murrayfield ghosts

Maro Itoje has called on his England side to be “bulletproof” as they seek to clinch a first win at Murrayfield in six years on Saturday. England can keep their grand slam pursuit alive by successfully defending the Calcutta Cup and Itoje has urged his side to create their own history despite their recent wretched form in Edinburgh.With England on a 12-match winning streak and Scotland suffering a shock defeat by Italy last week, Steve Borthwick’s side are clear favourites for victory. Their only victory at Murrayfield since Eddie Jones’ first game in charge came in miserable weather in 2020, however, with Scotland securing victories in 2022 and last time out in 2024.England have been regularly knocked from their stride on Scottish soil with a pre-match fracas in the tunnel preceding the 2018 defeat

about 2 hours ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘A code orange de-mental emergency going on here right now’

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Jon Stewart calls Maga backlash to Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show ‘actually pathetic’

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Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind was never a love story. It was a warning

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Actor Catherine O’Hara died of a blood clot in her lungs, death certificate says

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‘We recorded it in a kitchen!’ How China Crisis made Black Man Ray

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Super Bowl: Bad Bunny, the ads and everything but the football – as it happened

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