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England Manager Gareth Southgate Gets Knighthood

Former England manager Gareth Southgate will receive a knighthood at Windsor Castle on Wednesday, joining the ceremony among other honor recipients. The 54-year-old football manager earned recognition for his services to association football in the New Year Honours, following his leadership of England to consecutive European Championship finals in 2020 and 2024, as well as the 2018 World Cup semi-finals. Southgate becomes the fourth England manager to receive a knighthood, joining Sir Walter Winterbottom, Sir Alf Ramsey, and Sir Bobby Robson in this distinction. Sir Gareth stepped down from his position after eight years in charge, following England's 2-1 final defeat to Spain in July. Thomas Tuchel subsequently took over the role. Following the December announcement, Southgate shared his response on social media, humorously noting that his family would be unlikely to address him as "Sir." He stated, "It has […]

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This ยฃ1,300 Career Penalty Could Be Costing Young Workers – And It’s All About Where You Live

Younger workers in England encounter significant wage disparities based on geographic location rather than personal qualifications, according to new research highlighting regional pay inequalities. Data from the Resolution Foundation reveals substantial earning differences across England, with London workers earning nearly double their counterparts in areas like Liskeard, Cornwall. The analysis examined over 11 million early-career workers throughout England. The research indicates these wage gaps stem from workplace location rather than worker characteristics. Early-career employees face approximately 5% "place-based pay penalties," potentially costing around ยฃ1,300 annually when moving from high-paying markets like Harrogate to lower-paying areas such as Dudley. These findings challenge previous assumptions about regional wage inequality. Earlier studies suggested pay differences resulted from varying demographics between regions or local job market size. However, the new analysis demonstrates that larger job markets don't automatically generate higher wages. Cambridge workers, for […]

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