You’re all signed up for the Human Times
Thank you for your interest in our service.
Watch out for a confirmation email from our subscriptions team. Once you have confirmed you will join the worldwide community of over 30,000 subscribers who are receiving daily HR intelligence to lead, innovate and grow.
Note: Due to the nature of this message you may find this in your "promotions" or "spam" folders, please check there. If nothing arrives within a few minutes let us know. If you do not receive this email we will be happy to help get you set up.
Adding the email address [email protected], will help to ensure all newsletters arrive directly to your inbox.
Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
Bloomberg reports on how Colorado sparked an international trend for salary transparency when it started forcing employers to include pay ranges in job postings in 2021. Since then, about a dozen other US states have adopted similar requirements, and the European Union will follow suit later this year. Colorado’s law mandates employers to specify pay ranges, and also related benefits such as healthcare, in all job postings. The rule also prohibits employers from asking job candidates about their pay history or using it to determine wages. Such practices have been identified as perpetuating the pay discrimination often faced by women.
Full Issue
Human Times
UK
The UK's jobs market showed a decline in December, with both permanent and temporary positions falling. The KPMG and Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) survey indicated a four-month low in permanent placements and a rise in worker availability. Neil Carberry, REC chief executive, noted that business confidence must improve for hiring to recover. The unemployment rate reached 5.1% in Q4, the highest in four years, with predictions of it rising to 5.5%. Jon Holt, group chief executive of KPMG, said: "The jobs market is still signalling caution . . . [bosses] who have been prioritising increased investment in tech to improve resilience and productivity will be looking for signs of greater confidence in the wider economy before turning the hiring taps back on."
Full Issue
Human Times
Europe
Vacancies in Britain's financial sector rose by 12% in 2025 on the back of demand for workers in AI, regulation, data reporting and other specialist skills, according to recruiting firm Morgan McKinley. The robust hiring should continue into the first quarter of this year, Morgan McKinley director Mark Astbury said. Computing says the news of increased job vacancies driven by artificial intelligence is 'a welcome deviation from the persistent “AI spells doom for jobs” narrative.'
Full Issue
Human Times
Middle East
A World Economic Forum (WEF) survey says companies found it more difficult to do business in 2025 amid a deterioration in global cooperation on issues including trade, climate, technology and security. Nearly four in 10 of the 799 executives in 81 economies indicated growing barriers to trade, talent and cross-border capital flows had made it harder to do business. Only 10% of respondents took the opposite point of view. "Undeniably, a series of US tariff announcements in 2025 raised questions about the future of trade," said the WEF in its Global Cooperation Barometer 2026 report, nevertheless observing that the fact that six out of 10 executives did not highlight trade problems indicated that many had found ways to readjust.
Full Issue