As the Government continues to agonise on a replacement for the Licence Fee, a Sligo station’s coverage of count centres shows that local radio is public service broadcasting, too.
One thing I’m very comfortable suggesting to company founders is that in a post-zero interest rate policy world, their exit, if any, is much more likely to be driven by Ebitda than anything else.
If there’s one thing we have learned in recent months, it is that big tech companies have different ideas about how the rules should be implemented and enforced. That is what makes the Reddit and Tumblr cases so interesting.
Targeted investment in infrastructure can demonstrably deliver social inclusion and bridge the remaining gaps in an otherwise healthy economy. Can the Government listen to this advice in an election year?
French bond rate spreads could blow out if Emmanuel Macron’s high-risk election gamble doesn’t work out. This time, the euro is safe, however.
The Green leader’s resignation lets his party present a new face after participation in government did not result in the usual electoral wipe-out.
The Housing Commission disagreed over how to reform Ireland’s stringent system of rent controls. I was on the commission. These are the systems that we examined, and why different people took different stands.
As more employers press their workers to return to the office, the debate about what best suits both sides is intensifying – with no clear outcome so far.
Hamish Adams, the CEO of Athletics Ireland, is overjoyed by Ireland’s stunning success in Rome last week. But he maintains that the funding model for the sport should not be just linked to medals.
Given the political discourse in recent weeks, a conversation between the US Ambassador to Ireland and four major participants in the peace process was an important reminder that what happened in Northern Ireland in April 1998 is the political success story of our times.
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