Apple plant staff in China work 10 hours a day in sweatshop conditions without proper training
Workers at a Catcher factory in China were forced to work 10 hours a day for six days a week without proper training.
'There is a disaster looming': Carillion collapse could replicate 2008 banking crash
Carillion boss Keith Cochrane accuses RBS and banks of deliberately scuppering a deal to keep the company afloat.
Carillion workers ordered to remain silent after company collapses into liquidation
Internal memo urges workers not to speak to the media and to avoid airing questions on social media.
Carillion liquidation news: Private sector pay will be suspended as creditors' future uncertain
Government will continue to pay Carillion employees working in public sector, but private sector workers will be cut loose.
Carillion liquidation: Who is chairman Philip Green and what will happen to company pensions?
Construction giant has debts of £900m and entered voluntary liquidation after talks to keep it afloat failed.
Horrible Bosses: 1 in 10 Brits have imagined killing their boss
Study finds construction workers atop those harbouring murderous thoughts followed by media professionals.
Technology at the heart of NHS efficiency drive
James Slaney, co-founder, Dubber, looks at how innovative cloud call recording and speech recognition can deliver efficiencies and improve the quality of care in the NHS.
UK rail fares set for biggest increase in five years in January
Rail Delivery Group admits the increase is significant but vows to invest 97% of money from fares on improving services.
EU cap on bankers' bonuses could be scrapped after Brexit
Bank of England Governor Mark Carney hints Britain could tweak the rule once it leaves the European Union.
London has Britain's largest gender pay gap
Official data shows gender pay gap in the capital has only fallen from 15.1% in 1997 to 14.6% in 2017.
Capitalism that works for everyone? Beware fake news
Policymakers must stop pretending they can fix broken markets with more and more regulation.
UK Budget 2017: No-frills Budget sees Hammond cut stamp duty and boost NHS spending
Chancellor pledges to invest £44bn to revive Britain's housing sector and delivers £3.75bn boost to NHS.
UK Budget 2017 as it happened: Hammond scraps Stamp Duty for first time buyers up to £300,000
Chancellor abolishes Stamp Duty for all first time buyer purchases up to £300,000 as part of housing reforms.
Hammond and May's relationship at breaking point ahead of 'worst Budget build-up in history'
Downing Street fears that the Budget will fall flat as ties between prime minister Theresa May and chancellor Philip Hammond feel the strain.
UK Autumn Budget 2017 checklist: Six things we can expect from Philip Hammond's speech
Boost for housing sector, driverless cars and 5G technology are all expected to feature in Hammond's speech.
Philip Hammond urged to provide above-inflation pay rise to NHS staff
Think tank says annual cost of raising public sector pay in line with consumer price inflation would be £3.3bn by 2019/20.
Uber loses UK legal appeal against drivers' rights but will escalate fight to Supreme Court
Landmark ruling sees company lose ruling its drivers should be classed as workers rather than self-employed.
Equal Pay Day: Women in retail have one of the toughest jobs in the UK
November 10 is the day that women effectively stop being paid - but for those who work in retail that's just one of many problems.
Paradise Papers: Appleby says media has 'clear political agenda' as scandal swirls
Appleby, the global law firm at the centre of the so-called Paradise Papers disclosures, has slammed the investigative work of news institutions around the world.
Scrapping the NHS pay cap is a 'con' if it means funding cuts and job losses
Unions and workers urge Jeremy Hunt to reveal how the government will fund planned pay rises after announcing end of seven-year cap.
Nicola Sturgeon: Scotland will pay EU 'settled status' fee to help 'vital workers'
The Scottish National Party (SNP) conference is being held at the SEC Centre in Glasgow and will run from today (08 October) until Tuesday (10 October).
Have politicians and employers got the 'snowflake generation' all wrong?
The vexing socioeconomic question of our age is should we view millennials as 'entitled' and 'lazy' or simply flexing their economic muscles.
UK police buckling under the strain of mounting terrorist activity
Chief Constable Sara Thornton made the warning a week after the Parsons Green tube bombing.
Pound recovers as Britain's public sector spending falls to 10-year low
Sterling had fallen overnight against the US dollar following Federal Reserve decision to hike interest rates.
Unions reject government's 'pathetic' pay rise offer to police and prison officers
Unions threaten strike action over government's seven-year freeze on public sector pay.
Labour's Richard Burgon refuses to rule out supporting illegal strikes by unions
The shadow justice secretary would not answer directly if he would back illegal strike action or not.
Jeremy Corbyn accuses 'unscrupulous bosses' of driving down wages
Labour leader will also tell TUC conference that "gig economy" companies fail to protect workers and customers.
Princes William and Harry's candid Diana interviews are creating a 'strain' with Charles and Camilla
Royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliams explains why the princes are being so open about their late mother.
Stephen Hawking attacks Conservatives for 'underfunding and privatising' the NHS
Renowned physicist has been reliant on the NHS since he was diagnosed with motor neurone disease aged 21.
UK pay growth predicted to remain tepid over next year
Employers expect to raise wages by just 1% on average over coming 12 months.