Business
Wolverhampton’s Good Shepherd provides hot lunches and warm space
Ben Godfrey,in Wolverhamptonand
Tanya Gupta,West Midlands
BBCA charity has laid on hot lunches for people struggling as temperatures plummet and the government warns of the effects of cold weather.
Good Shepherd in Wolverhampton supports vulnerable and disadvantaged people in the city, from rough sleepers to families living in supported accommodation.
Lucy Cox, fundraising and development manager, said food was provided throughout the year regardless of the weather, but at this time of the year it was “even more important”.
She said it had been “business as usual” for volunteers, who offered people a warm space and a hot meal. The West Midlands saw freezing temperatures overnight and a dusting of snow.
‘Vital work’
Ms Cox said the charity offered a range of services, but found the first time people came to them was for a hot meal. She said volunteers currently saw about 150 people twice a week.
“We say it starts with a meal,” she said.
Good Shepherd also runs a breakfast club for rough sleepers three times a week.
BBC Weather Watchers/Early BirdMs Cox said: “We’re a trusted place within the city. People know that they can come to us for the support when they need it.”
She said the charity relied on about 60 volunteers to run services.
Support from businesses was “invaluable, not only for that financial and practical support, but also to get the messages out there that our work in the Wolverhampton is absolutely vital”, she added.
Other services include providing a homelessness outreach service, a family food pantry, a social enterprise cafe offering training and work for people who have faced homelessness and other barriers, and a community shop where people can buy items at affordable prices.
The aim was to provide “sustainable and lasting change for the people that need it most,” she said.
BBC Weather Watchers/Les at LargeA yellow cold weather warning issued by the Met Office for a large part of England and Wales was in place on Friday morning.
A further amber cold weather alert issued by the UK Health Security Agency remains in place until midday on Monday, as temperatures are forecast to remain low.
Business
Pakistan Inflation Slows More Than Expected: Bloomberg’s Report – SUCH TV
Pakistan’s inflation rate slowed more than expected in December, largely due to easing food prices. According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, the consumer price index (CPI) rose 5.6% year-on-year in December, down from 6.1% in November and below the 5.8% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.
Food prices increased 3.24% year-on-year in December, down from 5.53% in November, while housing and energy costs rose 6.86%.
In response to the slower-than-expected inflation, the State Bank of Pakistan cut the policy rate by 50 basis points on December 15, bringing it to its lowest level in nearly three years.
The central bank cited stable price pressures and the need to support economic growth after keeping rates unchanged for four consecutive policy meetings.
The Finance Ministry had forecast December inflation between 5.5% and 6.5%. Experts say improved food supplies, subdued global oil prices, and limited energy price adjustments helped contain inflation.
However, risks remain from fiscal slippages, global energy supply shocks, and climate change.
Border tensions with Afghanistan disrupted trade, but alternative sources helped maintain food supply, keeping broader inflation pressures under control.
Business
Central Govt Employees Likely To Get 2% DA Hike Soon; Salary To Rise From January 2026
Last Updated:
The All-India Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers rose by 0.5 points to 148.2, keeping the 12-month average firmly on track to take DA/DR to 60%, from 58% currently.
January 2026 DA Hike.
DA Hike January 2026, DA Hike Latest News: Central government employees and pensioners are set for a 2 percentage point hike in dearness allowance (DA) and dearness relief (DR) from January 1, 2026, with the latest inflation data pointing to the 60% DA/DR level under the 7th Central Pay Commission (CPC).
The trigger is the All-India Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers (AICPI-IW) for November 2025, released by the Labour Bureau under the Ministry of Labour & Employment on December 31, 2025. The index rose by 0.5 points to 148.2, keeping the 12-month average firmly on track to take DA/DR to 60%.
November AICPI-IW confirms 60% DA trajectory
As per the standard DA formula used for the 7th Central Pay Commission, the rolling 12-month average of AICPI-IW (base year 2016=100) is used to compute the percentage increase over the base index of 261.42. With November’s reading, the calculated DA has reached 59.93%, effectively at the doorstep of 60%.
Month-wise calculations show a steady climb:
- July 2025: 58.53%
- August 2025: 58.94%
- September 2025: 59.29%
- October 2025: 59.58%
- November 2025: 59.93%
Only the December 2025 index reading remains, but scenario analysis indicates that the outcome is now largely locked in.
December scenarios still point to 60% DA
Even under different assumptions for December inflation, the DA outcome does not materially change:
- Index unchanged at 148.2: DA works out to 60.34%
- Index rises to 150.2: DA increases to 60.53%
- Index slips to 146.2: DA still holds at 60.15%
Since the Government of India announces DA only in whole numbers, any figure between 60.00% and 60.99% is officially rounded to 60%. This makes a 2% hike, from the existing 58% to 60%, almost certain.
When will the hike be announced?
While the DA revision takes effect from January 1, 2026, the formal announcement is typically made later. Based on past trends, employees can expect the government to notify the revised DA around March or April 2026, with arrears paid retrospectively from January.
Why this DA hike matters more than usual
This revision is especially significant because January 1, 2026 also marks the formal start of the 8th Central Pay Commission cycle. Historically, when a new pay commission is implemented, the prevailing DA is merged into basic pay and the DA clock is reset to zero under the new structure.
In that sense, the expected 60% DA under the 7th CPC becomes a crucial reference point. It effectively acts as an inflation buffer, influencing discussions around the fitment factor and overall salary restructuring under the 8th CPC.
What employees can expect
If approved as expected, the 2% DA hike will translate into a modest but meaningful increase in monthly take-home salary for serving employees and higher pension payouts for retirees, at a time when retail inflation pressures continue to persist.
Barring an unexpected collapse in December inflation data, the numbers now clearly indicate that 60% DA from January 2026 is a done deal, making this one of the most closely watched DA revisions in recent years.
January 03, 2026, 10:22 IST
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Business
K-beauty: From social media trend to economic powerhouse
Suranjana TewariAsia Business Correspondent, Seoul, South Korea
Who would have thought serums infused with snail mucin – the sticky substance they secrete – would become a part of skincare routines around the world?
Well, it’s happened – and the gooey elasticity is key, according to a viral TikTok challenge promoting the serum. It made its manufacturer, the small South Korean label CosRX, go global. It is now owned by Amorepacific, the country’s biggest cosmetics company.
The rapid spread of that sticky serum tells you just how wildly successful K-beauty has become. Fuelled by viral content and trends, it is one of the biggest industries in South Korea, where the pressure to look almost flawless has always been huge in a highly competitive society.
The domestic market alone was valued at about $13bn (£9.6bn) in 2024, with sales of some products expected to grow at double-digit rates. And the rest of the world is just as obsessed with K-beauty – which is perhaps unsurprising given it’s part of the Hallyu, or Korean Wave, which has made K-Pop and K-dramas a global phenomenon.
K-beauty brands now occupy whole sections at global retailers – from Sephora to Boots to Walmart. In the first half of 2025, South Korea overtook France, the birthplace of modern cosmetics, to become the world’s second-largest exporter of beauty products, after the United States.
Search for “Korean skincare” on TikTok, Instagram or YouTube and you’ll be met with a deluge of content from influencers, some of whom have hundreds of millions of followers. They dissect ingredient lists, film unboxings and record “Get Ready With Me” videos built around ideas such as “glass skin”, sheet masks and, of course, snail mucin.
“There are so many products and brands, and a lot of times you’re exposed to millions of them as a consumer – it’s highly saturated and competitive,” said Liah Yoo, a beauty influencer and founder of the US-based K-beauty brand Krave Beauty.
The formula behind the rise
At the heart of K-beauty’s rise is a relentless pace of innovation. New formulations appear every few months, often designed to spark the next online obsession.
Ten-step skincare routines, overnight “water sleeping masks” and headline-grabbing ingredients such as salmon sperm were once viewed as niche or unappealing. Today, many are staples in bathroom cabinets from London to Los Angeles.
Social media has been central to this shift. Products launched in Seoul are on TikTok and Instagram feeds in the US, UK, India and Australia instantly.
There are however growing concerns about the social impact of beauty ideals, particularly on young people. Experts warn that constant exposure to skincare content online can fuel anxiety and excessive spending.
Getty Images“We are fully aware that excessive use or misuse of social media can lead to backlash,” said Kim Seung-hwan, Amorepacific’s chief executive, adding that brands must strike a careful balance in how they use online platforms.
The challenge will only grow as the industry expands to include Western multinationals.
L’Oréal acquired a South Korean conglomerate which included the brand Dr.G in late 2024, saying the deal would help meet rising demand for effective yet affordable K-beauty products.
Other global firms are increasingly incorporating popular ingredients associated with Korean brands such as centella asiatica and rice water into their own lines.
Many of South Korea’s large beauty brands are part of the country’s powerful conglomerates, or chaebols.
Amorepacific accounts for roughly half of the domestic market. Its portfolio ranges from premium brands such as Sulwhasoo to global mass-market names like Laneige, environmentally focused labels such as Innisfree, and fast-growing independent brands. But even as a chaebol, Amorepacific says it looks to smaller independent brands for fresh ideas.
Getty Images“Through the founder and the CosRX team, we were able to learn their approach to formula innovation and how to respond more quickly to consumer needs,” Mr Kim from Amorepacific said. “These lessons have since been integrated into our wider organisation.”
In 2024, Amorepacific sold about $6.2bn of products. LG Household & Health Care, another major conglomerate, recorded sales of $4.1bn. The scale of the industry continues to show up in South Korea’s export figures too.
Exports rose 15% in the first half of 2025 to a record $5.5bn, largely driven by strong sales in the US and Europe, putting the country on track to surpass $10bn in annual beauty exports.
For Mr Kim, all customers are not the same.
“In countries like Japan, Korea and China, there is more interest in things like flawless skin. In Europe fragrance is the main category, and in the US make-up is more popular,” he said.
“Things are changing though,” he added, pointing to rising interest among Western consumers in youthful-looking skin and sun protection, particularly as awareness of climate change and UV exposure grows.
Keeping up with the competition
To cater to the ever-growing demand, South Korea’s 30,000 or so beauty brands rely on a highly sophisticated industrial ecosystem.
They are supported by original development manufacturers, or ODMs, which handle research, formulation and production for thousands of labels.
Getty ImagesEven large conglomerates outsource some product lines, while smaller names depend heavily on ODMs to move quickly and keep costs down.
Cosmax, one of the largest manufacturers, supplies products to about 4,500 brands from factories across South Korea, China, the US and South East Asia.
In 2024, it accounted for just over a quarter of South Korea’s $10bn worth of cosmetics exports.
This allows products to move from being conceptualised to being sold in as little as six months – the process that can take one to three years for many Western brands.
Automation helps keep costs down. The BBC visited a sprawling Amorepacific factory outside South Korea’s capital Seoul, where a handful of workers oversaw fully automated production lines bottling Laneige’s Water Sleeping Mask and CosRX’s Vitamin C 23 Serum.
Speed, however, comes at a cost. Intense competition has contributed to thin profit margins and high rates of business failures. According to government data, more than 8,800 cosmetics brands have gone out of business in recent years.
“South Korea has great infrastructure that can help you create a brand quickly, but growing a successful brand is another story,” said Ms Yoo. “It comes down to your brand ethos, your identity, and how different your products are from anything else on the market.”
As competition intensifies, brands face growing pressure to be more transparent, and to focus on ingredients and the effectiveness of their products rather than celebrity endorsements.
“We’re not just buying from the big brands now. We’re actually talking about ingredients, where it’s sourced, what it does,” said Mia Chen, a prominent beauty influencer. “A lot of Korean skincare derives from natural ingredients, and we all want that on our skin without side effects.”
Getty ImagesThe industry is also being shaped by its changing market.
China is no longer the biggest overseas buyer as its own brands erode the dominance once enjoyed by Japanese and Korean imports.
For the first time in 80 years, Amorepacific’s North America business overtook the one in China last year, Mr Kim said, adding that the firm also expects growth in Japan, Europe, India and the Middle East.
The US remains a key market, importing more beauty products from South Korea than anywhere else. But President Donald Trump’s 15% tariffs on Korean imports have sparked some uncertainty.
Olive Young, South Korea’s biggest cosmetics retailer which plans to open its first store in the US this year, imposed a 15% customs duty on American orders. Amorepacific said it would consider price increases only on a case-by-case basis, based on discussions with retail partners such as Sephora and Walmart.
But the firms have the backing of the South Korean government, which designated K-beauty a strategic national asset in December, promising to support manufacturing and exports.
It is a telling vote of confidence in an industry that kicked off as a viral trend and is now an economic force.
Additional reporting by Jaltson Akkanath Chummar and Juna Moon
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