Employment UK

  • May 13, 2026

    Gov't Unit Targets £99B Australian Pension Fund Investment

    The British government has launched a project designed to attract around £99 billion ($133.8 billion) of Australian pension fund investment over the next decade as part of its broader bid to direct retirements savings capital toward the U.K.

  • May 13, 2026

    UK Pension Funding Drops Again Amid Wider Volatility

    The overall surplus of U.K. retirement saving programs fell by £5.3 billion ($7.2 billion) in April as continuing market volatility pushed down funding for the second month in a row, the Pension Protection Fund has said.

  • May 13, 2026

    Ex-QPR Player Wins Racist Banter Claim Against Ex-Manager

    A professional footballer has won his claim that he endured racist banter from the manager of a lower-league team where he was on loan, although his home club has avoided liability for the offending comments.

  • May 13, 2026

    Tesco Loses Appeal To Ax Training Docs From Equal Pay Feud

    An appeals court has rejected Tesco's attempt to exclude training documents from an evaluation of the jobs done by staff at the retailer amid an ongoing equal-pay claim from thousands of mostly female workers in its stores.

  • May 13, 2026

    Arc Steers £66M Leeds Building Society Pensions Deal

    Leeds Building Society has completed a £66 million ($90 million) bulk purchase annuity transaction for its staff retirement program, Royal London Group said on Wednesday.

  • May 12, 2026

    Whitestone Denied Judicial Review In BSB Pupillage Row

    Whitestone Chambers was denied permission on Tuesday to challenge a decision by the Bar Standards Board which prevented the London commercial set from continuing to train pupils, with a London court ruling the chambers had not used alternative routes to resolve the dispute. 

  • May 12, 2026

    New Liability Rules Put Businesses In Uncharted Territory

    New powers that put companies on the chopping block for crimes committed by their executives dramatically expand corporate liability to include a wider array of offenses, which businesses already struggling with "compliance fatigue" have barely begun to grapple with, lawyers say.

  • May 12, 2026

    Barrister Loses Bid To Revive Race Bias Case Against 10 KBW

    A criminal barrister has lost her appeal, in which she claimed that she was racially discriminated against by her chambers, as a judge ruled on Tuesday that her case had "no merit whatsoever."

  • May 12, 2026

    Autistic Woman Wins £100K Over Withdrawn Job Offer

    A city council in the Midlands must pay £100,783 ($136,187) to a job applicant after unfairly withdrawing her job offer after she was given a formal diagnosis of autism, an employment tribunal has ruled.

  • May 12, 2026

    FCA Bans, Fines Pensions Advisory Director For Misconduct

    The Financial Conduct Authority said on Tuesday that it has fined a pensions adviser £755,000 ($1 million) and banned him from working in financial services in Britain for acting without integrity and putting customers at risk for personal gain.

  • May 12, 2026

    Gov't Clarifies Inheritance Tax Rules On Pension Wealth

    The government has issued a statement clarifying how it wants pension wealth to be brought into the scope of inheritance tax next year.

  • May 12, 2026

    Pensions Watchdog Floats New 5-Year Strategy

    The Pensions Regulator has opened a consultation on a refreshed corporate strategy that will guide its work over the next five years, as the pensions market is set to undergo major changes through the Pension Schemes Act 2026.

  • May 12, 2026

    Split Trial Unworkable In £4.5M Claim Against Post Office

    An appellate court ruled on Tuesday that practical difficulties render a split-trial order unworkable in a £4.5 million ($6.1 million) claim brought by a former sub-postmaster against the Post Office and Fujitsu over a judgment that was allegedly fraudulently obtained.

  • May 12, 2026

    Judicial Watchdog To Reopen Bullying Judge Complaints

    The Judicial Conduct Investigations Office will reopen complaints by several women who say that they were bullied by an Employment Tribunal judge, conceding before an upcoming court hearing that it had misapplied rules on how it investigates conduct.

  • May 12, 2026

    AI 'Critical' To Delivery Of Pension Schemes Act, Lumera Says

    Pension reforms introduced in recent government legislation will accelerate the use of artificial intelligence within the retirement savings sector as more organizations turn to digital tools to meet regulatory requirements, an insurance technology company said Tuesday.

  • May 12, 2026

    2 Former Carillion Execs Banned For Misleading Statements

    The accounting watchdog said Tuesday that it has banned two former finance directors of Carillion PLC from working in the profession for their reckless preparation of financial statements for the construction business, which is in liquidation.

  • May 11, 2026

    AWOL Driver Wins Race Discrimination Case Over Dismissal

    A London tribunal has ruled that logistics firm Wincanton racially discriminated against a Black driver by sacking him after he was absent from work for nine days, ruling that the company would not have fired a white driver so swiftly.

  • May 11, 2026

    Shuttered Law Firm Faces Claim From Staff After SRA Steps In

    Regional law firm BLB Solicitors is facing a claim that it failed to consult up to 85 staff who it made redundant after the Solicitors Regulation Authority stepped in to shutter the operation when it collapsed.

  • May 11, 2026

    Lorry Driver Wins £25K After Employer Refused Redundancy

    A waste recycling firm must pay £24,656 ($33,600) to a lorry driver it forced to resign after rejecting his reasonable offers to take redundancy voluntarily when the company wanted to relocate him from a site that was closing to a new hub that was a much further commute for him.

  • May 11, 2026

    Gender Pensions Gap Starts At Age 28, AJ Bell Finds

    The U.K.'s gender pensions gap starts from the age of 28, according to analysis released on Monday by an investment platform.

  • May 11, 2026

    Gateley Guides Software Firm's £4.5M Pension Deal

    A financial services consultancy said Monday that it has advised software company Access Group on securing the retirement benefits of all 40 members of its pensions plan in a £4.5 million ($6.1 million) full buy-in with Just Group PLC.

  • May 08, 2026

    Tesco HR Exec Defends Store Wage Cuts In Equal Pay Case

    Tesco's top-ranking HR executive denied that slashing higher pay for special in-store shifts was motivated purely by cost-cutting, testifying Friday at a trial where thousands of mainly female shop workers claim they were denied equal pay.

  • May 08, 2026

    News Publisher Denies Ousting Execs For Whistleblowing

    A regional newspaper publisher has denied forcing out two executives for blowing the whistle on its allegedly fraudulent overcharging of advertisers, while pressing home its claim that the pair must repay £900,000 ($1.2 million) over their plot to aid rival Reach PLC.

  • May 08, 2026

    Manager Accused Of Credit Card Fraud Was Unfairly Sacked

    A home care manager who was fired after being accused of misusing the family-run business' credit card amid a power struggle has won his unfair dismissal case.

  • May 08, 2026

    Top UK Court To Hear Gender-Critical Barrister's Bias Appeal

    The U.K.'s top court said Friday that it will hear an appeal from gender-critical barrister Allison Bailey against a ruling that she cannot hold LGBT charity Stonewall liable for a discriminatory probe into her online activity.

Expert Analysis

  • Workplace Neurotech Requires A Balance Of Risk And Reward

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    The U.K. Information Commissioner's Office's recently released a report on neurotech, and while such technologies could unlock a stubbornly low productivity stagnation, they pose employer data compliance questions and potential employee discrimination risks, say Ingrid Hesselbo and Ben Milloy at Fladgate.

  • ITV Scandal Offers Important Considerations On HR Policies

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    The recent resignation of former ITV host Phillip Schofield after admitting to an affair with a younger staff member raises questions on employers' duty of care and highlights the need for not only having the right internal policies in place but also understanding and applying them, says Hina Belitz at Excello Law.

  • What The Italian Whistleblowing Decree Means For Employers

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    The new Italian whistleblowing decree, guidelines to which must be adopted by authorities this week, represents a major milestone in protecting employees by broadening employers' obligations, and it is essential that multinational companies with an interest in Italy verify their compliance with the more stringent requirements, say lawyers at Studio Legale Chiomenti.

  • What TPR's Guidance On DEI Means For Pensions Industry

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    The Pension Regulator is one of the first regulators to issue guidance on equality, diversity and inclusion, and employers and trustees should incorporate its advice by developing policies and monitoring progress to ensure that improvements are made regularly, say lawyers at Linklaters.

  • 10 Tips On Drafting A Company Code Of Ethics

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    In light of a recent report that less than 50% of companies on the FTSE 250 and 350 indexes have a code of ethics, it is clear that more organizations should be informed of the reasons for having one, like reducing risk and solidifying commitment to integrity, and how to implement it, says Shiv Haria-Shah at Fieldfisher.

  • Breaking Down Germany's New Whistleblower Protection Act

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    Germany recently passed a whistleblowing law, which will bring new obligations for companies, and businesses with more than 50 employees must now check whether they have adequate reporting lines in place and properly staffed functions to handle whistleblower reports, say Mark Zimmer and Katharina Humphrey at Gibson Dunn.

  • UK Case Shows Risks Of Taking Shortcuts In Fund Payments

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    While the High Court recently reversed a decision in Floreat Investment Management v. Churchill, finding that investors routing funds into their own accounts was not dishonest, the case serves as a cautionary tale on the dangers of directing investment funds other than as contractually provided, say lawyers at Dechert.

  • How The UK Employment Court Backlogs Jeopardize Justice

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    While employment tribunal case delays may not top the agenda of new Secretary of State for Justice Alex Chalk, recent data reveals deep and long-term issues, including a staggering half a million current or former employees waiting for their case to trudge forward in the queue, says Heather Wilmot at ARAG.

  • A First Look At UK's Reform Approach To EU Employment Law

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    The U.K. government's recent proposal on EU employment laws is relatively modest, retaining the post-Brexit law in areas such as recording working hours and holiday pay calculations, and assuaging predictions of a bonfire of EU employment rights, say Sally Hulston and James Davies at Lewis Silkin.

  • How The UK Noncompete Cap Proposal May Affect Employers

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    Following the U.K. government's plan to limit noncompete clauses to three months, employers will undoubtedly look at other options to prevent post-employment competition, such as use of garden leave, but this may keep employees out of the talent pool, say David Samuels and Tarun Tawakley at Lewis Silkin.

  • Employers Should Welcome UK Guidance On Positive Action

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    Recent guidance from the U.K. government clarifies the often overlooked and misunderstood concept of positive action under the Equality Act 2010, and may help employers feel more confident in using permitted conduct to promote equality, say lawyers at Fieldfisher.

  • Lessons For Businesses From The Raab Bullying Report

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    In light of the inquiry into workplace bullying that led to last month’s resignation of U.K. government minister Dominic Raab, businesses must ensure that they and their managers adhere to company policies, procedures and processes, and remain vigilant in stamping out and preventing such behaviors, says Suzy Blade at Setfords.

  • What The Ethnicity Pay Gap Guidance Means For Employers

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    In light of the U.K. government's recent guidance on measuring ethnicity pay differences, which could become mandatory, employers should consider ethnicity pay gap reporting and the complexities unique to it, in order to support a truly diverse workforce, say Catherine Shepherd and Kath Sadler-Smith at Osborne Clarke.

  • How The EU Pay Transparency Directive Will Affect Employers

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    The newly adopted EU Pay Transparency Directive aims to strengthen the principle of equal pay between men and women by way of mandatory gender pay gap reporting, and employers should prepare for the significant changes this will bring by closing any existing gaps and establishing a transparent compensation system, says Ulrike Conradi at Ogletree.

  • 3 Employee Protection Issues To Watch In UK Gov't

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    The recent U.K. harassment proposals, autism employment review and artificial intelligence white paper demonstrate that employee protection and well-being are high on the government's agenda, and could lead to changes in employers' support and hiring processes, say Catherine Shepherd and Kath Sadler-Smith at Osborne Clarke.

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