Reports of English literature’s death have been greatly exaggerated
The rise of AI is making a degree in humanities more valuable than ever

The rise of AI is making a degree in humanities more valuable than ever
With the mandatory pay rate matching starting salaries in many careers, middle-class graduates paying back student debts feel betrayed
After Ursula von der Leyen’s chestnut horse Dolly was killed by a lone wolf, Brussels lifted a ban on hunting the predators
Traders are worried the president-elect is tooling up for a trade war, but they are still piling into US equities
In many ways, the UK is now a carbon-copy of Biden’s America. So will the British Right mimic the Republicans’ success at the next election?
The Chancellor is wasting her one shot at arresting the UK’s seemingly inevitable decline
Meltdown, by journalist Duncan Mavin, is a highly readable survey of the bank’s tawdry past, from tax-dodging claims to its recent collapse
While his lawyers argue his conviction is based on faulty evidence, the fate of Robert Roberson hangs in the balance
The Prime Minister’s cack-handed remarks bode ill for Britain’s strivers as the Budget looms
Experts say changes to the rules on industrial action, combined with rising taxes and increased regulation, will put investors off the UK
Berlin is putting its wounded pride ahead of commercial realism
As his shocking TV report on Ethiopia’s famine turns 40, the journalist and broadcaster reflects on the tumultuous culture at the BBC
A demographic crisis is brewing as emigration from the UK’s rainy isles ramps up
He started his career in banking before rising through the ranks in the TV industry – now he’s at the heart of the ongoing donations row
Former Co-op Bank chair Paul Flowers is back in court, accused of fraud worth nearly £100,000 – but his downward trajectory began years ago
Pretending that existing projects are somehow shiny and new won’t rub with investors