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Royal Mail set to axe 2,000 jobs as part of 'management restructure' plans

ROYAL MAIL, whose workers have helped the nation cope with coronavirus lockdown, said on Thursday (25) that it will axe 2,000 management jobs as it battles ongoing turmoil.

The former state-run company revealed the cost-cutting overhaul in its annual results, adding that the Covid-19 outbreak had sparked a jump in demand for parcels -- but it still suffered from an ongoing slump in its core letters business.


"In recent years, our UK business has not adapted quickly enough to the changes in our marketplace of more parcels and fewer letters," said the company's executive chair Keith Williams in an earnings statement.

"Covid-19 has accelerated those trends, presenting additional challenges.

"We're taking immediate action on costs, which will result in a £130 million saving in people costs next year and flat non-people costs, along with a reduction of around £300 million in capital expenditure across the group over the next two years, to address the immediate impact of Covid-19.

"Regrettably, we are also proposing a management restructure impacting around 2,000 roles."

Williams said a larger margin of the job cuts would affect the head office staff, and only some frontline workers would be removed.

Since Britain's lockdown was imposed on March 23, Royal Mail employees have enjoyed an elevated status with the UK public thanks to their key role in delivering virus test kits and helping businesses to survive the economic fallout.

Williams was quick to praise the company's workforce despite news of the heavy job cuts.

"I'd like to offer my profound thanks to all my colleagues across the group," he added.

"Our UK postmen and women are playing a crucial role in mitigating the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. They are key workers on the frontline."

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OpenAI acquires health tech startup Torch in push into medical AI

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OpenAI has acquired healthcare technology startup Torch for roughly £47 million ($60 million), according to CNBC, citing a source familiar with the deal. The price was not disclosed publicly, but the acquisition points to a stronger push by OpenAI into medical artificial intelligence.

The deal comes just days after OpenAI rolled out ChatGPT Health, a new experience designed to help users engage with health-related information in a more personalised way. The timing suggests the company is moving quickly to build infrastructure around medical data rather than relying only on general-purpose AI tools.

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