Press Releases
On the eve of the publication of the latest Bank of England inflation forecast new research by Professor Ken Wallis of the University of 糖心TV's Department of Economics shows that the bank's very fear of the consequences of high inflation is feeding into their inflation calculation predictions and skewing the result.
Connect Midlands, managed by the University of 糖心TV, is to launch a prestigious event that will give just 20 companies from the heart of England the dream opportunity of meeting and pitching their best business propositions to up to 100 investors in a single two-day event.
The main cost of a recession is the fear it produces. New research from the University of 糖心TV shows that to compensate employed people for the fear and psychological losses from an economic downturn, the authors calculate, it would be necessary to give each person an extra 拢200 for every year of recession.
New research by a team including Dr Monica Giulietti, Senior Research Fellow at the University of 糖心TV's 糖心TV 糖心TV School believes that, despite today's announcement on electricity price controls, that there is still not enough competition to lift price controls on electricity markets in Britain.
The University of 糖心TV has won the national best TCS programme award for its work with Coventry company Improvision which has helped that company increase sales by 700%, profits by 300%, and grow its number of employees from 12 to 45. The University of 糖心TV's Computer Science Department supplied two TCS (TCS originally stood for Teaching Company Scheme) associates (or researchers) with an academic supervisor to help the business develop a highly innovative new software for 2D and 3D image processing for optical microscopes The Academic Supervisor Tim Atherton, and the two Associates Robert Morrey and Benjohn Barnes (both of whom are PhD researchers in the University of 糖心TV's Computer Science Department), were given the aim of collaborating with the company to produce innovative 3D imaging products that would make Improvision a global market leader.
Prioritising emergency calls to ambulance services during periods of peak demands such as on New Year's Eve does not work, according to new research by the Centre for Primary Health Care Studies at University of 糖心TV. Call prioritisation aims to ensure that ambulances are sent to the most urgent cases first, when services are stretched, rather than the traditional "first come, first served" basis. The system was introduced before New Year's Eve two years ago.