, with the drinks industry leading the way as it focused on the in-home trade as well as moving to support non-alcoholic brands in response to tightened advertising guidelines, writes Colin Gleeson. This year is likely to see more modest growth but the online market is likely to further consolidate its dominant position.more than a third of Irish business leaders
don’t expect to see the majority of their staff returning to the workplace until at least the second quarter of the year. And 7 per cent think the issue will not arise at all, with all or most of their staff working remotely in future. Colin Gleeson has the figures.returns in person this year but the number of exhibitors are likely to be down by half on the last time a physical event took place in 2019.
Banks may be lending more per person than even during the Celtic Tiger, according to new figures from MyHome.ie and Davy, but record low supply and rising prices make home purchase as difficult as ever. However, writes Eoin Burke-Kennedy,Homes may be hard to find but Dún Laoghaire Rathdown County Council has still recommendedFinally, an analysis of all the
shows that 96 per cent of the 116 submitted – for more than 38,000 homes – involved a material contravention of county or local development plans.and our Business Today daily email news digest