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Showing 1279 results for Assessing the Impact of Brexit on Financial Services

Risky Business

Understanding the level of financial risk faced by utilities can help regulators to design incentive mechanisms and calibrate the rate of return.

Westminster Health Forum – Next steps for general practice and primary care in England

Frontier’s Nick Woolley will be speaking at Westminster Health Forum – Next steps for general practice and primary care in England the 17 of December online. This conference will focus on next steps for general practice and primary care in England and discuss priorities for the Government as it consults on development of its 10-year plan for the NHS, expected in the spring. Nick will join the Assessing proposals for improving accessibility and reducing pressures in primary care panel.

João Nazário Carvalho

João joined Frontier’s Brussels office in September 2023 and has worked across various practices. He is currently working in the Competition and Public Policy practices. During his time at Frontier, João has worked on a range of projects covering commercial and regulatory issues, including mergers, market investigations, regulatory due diligence, green transition and impact evaluation projects.

Controlled takeoff

In 2020 all major airports have made huge financial losses, and the future remains uncertain. It could take years for traffic to get back to pre-COVID-19 levels. In this bulletin we highlight how adjustments to regulation can help to speed up recovery in the airport sector.

How should the water sector respond to Covid-19?

What impact is the Covid-19 pandemic having on the water sector, and what is the most appropriate regulatory response?

Digital microbusinesses and local economic outcomes in the UK

Frontier Economics has completed a new study examining the impact of digital microbusinesses on local economic outcomes in the UK.

UK’s nascent class action regime

In January 2021, Mr. Justin Le Patourel brought a collective proceedings claim for £469m on behalf of approximately 2.3m customers who are alleged to have been overcharged by BT for their standalone landline telephone services.

Social tariffs: an essential tariff for essential goods?

Social tariffs are lower-priced tariffs for essential services like broadband, mobile, and water. They’re aimed at improving affordability for people on lower incomes. But in a cost of living crisis, they may not provide the level of help they should be. Why? And what can we do to fix it?