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Recent Editions
North America
Human Times
Meta and Microsoft are preparing staff reductions while continuing heavy investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure and talent. Meta plans to cut 10% of its workforce, or about 8,000 roles, as it seeks efficiency alongside capital expenditure of up to $135bn. Janelle Gale, Meta’s chief people officer, said the reductions would help “offset the other investments we’re making.” Microsoft will offer voluntary redundancy to about 8,750 eligible U.S. employees and change its employee stock reward rules. The moves show how major technology companies are trying to control operating costs while funding large AI commitments, including infrastructure expansion and recruitment of specialist engineering talent.
Full Issue
UK
Human Times
The proportion of people who are unemployed and not looking for a job increased to 21% in the three months to February, up from 20.7%. Job vacancies fell to 711,000, the lowest in nearly five years, while payrolled employees decreased by 11,000 in March. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) noted that these figures predate the Iran war, which may further strain the job market. The figures serve as a reminder that the UK jobs market going into the current energy crisis is in a fragile state, says James Smith, UK economist at ING. Economists predict that the Bank of England will likely maintain interest rates at 3.75% amid these challenges.
Full Issue
USA
Education Slice
The National Transportation Safety Board has recommended that all new school buses be equipped with alcohol-detection systems that can prevent operation if a driver is impaired, following a serious crash in West Virginia involving a drunk driver that injured multiple children. The agency said the issue is not isolated, citing past cases of school bus drivers being arrested or cited for driving under the influence, and emphasized that higher safety standards are needed given the responsibility of transporting children. While the cost and implementation details remain unclear, widespread adoption would likely require federal or state regulation and possibly congressional action. Although school buses are generally considered safe, with relatively few passenger fatalities compared to other vehicles, the NTSB argues that adding alcohol-detection technology could further reduce risks, despite potential resistance from industry stakeholders over costs and operational concerns.
Full Issue
USA
Accountancy Slice
The Treasury Department announced that the IRS will revise Form 990, which is used by tax-exempt organizations, to enhance transparency and combat fraud. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated: "Public money and tax-exempt status demand public accountability," emphasizing the need for clearer reporting on funding sources and uses. The revisions aim to address concerns regarding "fiscal sponsorship arrangements" that may obscure project control and funding. The IRS plans to publish proposed regulations and seek public input before finalizing changes. Treasury Assistant Secretary Ken Kies added: "Tax-exempt status is not immunity from scrutiny," highlighting the expectation for organizations to disclose financial control and allocation. This initiative follows a recent IRS whistleblower alert urging reports of misuse of federal funds by tax-exempt entities.
Full Issue
Scotland
Legal Matters Scotland
Police Scotland has paused its plans to enhance drug driving enforcement due to budget constraints. Despite drug driving becoming a significant threat on Scotland's roads, the force will not expand testing among local officers this financial year. Justice Secretary Angela Constance supported a festive crackdown that saw 626 roadside tests, resulting in 398 drivers caught. Scottish Labour's Pauline McNeill and Conservative Liam Kerr expressed concern over the impact of funding cuts on public safety. David Kennedy, general secretary of the Scottish Police Federation, warned that the pause could undermine public confidence and officer morale.
Full Issue
North America
Legal Slice
The Trump administration has cut more than 4,000 employees from major law-enforcement agencies, according to Justice Department records obtained by Reuters. The FBI workforce fell more than 7%, or about 2,600 people, while the DEA dropped about 6% and the ATF lost about 14% of staff. The National Security Division declined nearly 38%, with budget materials citing “unprecedented personnel constraints.” Former official Adam Hickey said the losses shift agencies from proactive work to being “purely reactive.” Reuters reported fewer drug-trafficking prosecutions, more unfilled roles and strain across prisons, civil rights and environmental enforcement.
Full Issue
Europe
Risk Channel
Richard Horne, chief executive of the UK's National Cyber Security Centre, has warned that Britain should prepare for an increase in cyberattacks linked to hostile states. Speaking at the government's annual CYBERUK conference in Glasgow, Horne noted that the agency manages about four significant cyber incidents weekly, with many serious threats originating from nation states such as China, Iran, and Russia. He said: "Were we to be in, or near, a conflict situation, the UK would likely face hacktivist attacks at scale." Horne meanwhile told Sky News that AI models such as Mythos are "warning shots" for the UK about the danger of powerful AI. He said he didn't consider AI a national security threat at present, as new models were "not finding new attacks, they're just exposing more security vulnerabilities." He observed: "We're in a kind of perfect storm where we have two forces - one huge technology disruption, one rising geopolitical tensions, and they come together. And cybersecurity's in the middle of them."
Full Issue
North America
CFO Slice
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman has urged major Wall Street banks to support proposed capital rule changes, emphasizing that the plans would reduce overall industry requirements and should not be undermined by demands for institution-specific concessions. Despite the proposals being seen as broadly favorable to banks, some executives continue to push for further easing, raising concerns among regulators about delays to one of the most significant post-crisis regulatory overhauls. Bowman is aiming to finalize the reforms by year-end, balancing industry input with the need for consensus among regulators and avoiding prolonged disputes that could stall implementation.
Full Issue