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Category: Europe

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dmitry Grigorenko: Roskomnadzor blocked over 44 thousand fraudulent sites last year

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Dmitry Grigorenko at a working meeting at Roskomnadzor

    July 8, 2025

    Working meeting at Roskomnadzor

    July 8, 2025

    Dmitry Grigorenko at a working meeting at Roskomnadzor

    July 8, 2025

    Dmitry Grigorenko and Minister of Communications and Mass Media Maxim Shadayev at a working meeting at Roskomnadzor

    July 8, 2025

    Previous news Next news

    Dmitry Grigorenko at a working meeting at Roskomnadzor

    Roskomnadzor is actively involved in the Government’s systematic work to protect citizens from fraudsters. This was reported by Deputy Prime Minister – Head of the Government Staff Dmitry Grigorenko during a working meeting at Roskomnadzor.

    The Deputy Prime Minister noted that the department has a number of information systems that can identify and block fraudulent websites and calls. In 2024 alone, more than 44,000 fraudulent resources used to steal personal data and financial resources were blocked. Roskomnadzor’s system processes over 455 million calls daily, of which about 1.2 million are calls with a spoofed number. Fraudsters use such numbers to deceive users.

    The agency is also taking part in the discussion of the second package of measures to combat fraud. Among the measures is the creation and implementation of a service based on artificial intelligence that will identify suspicious calls and warn citizens about telephone scammers.

    Dmitry Grigorenko recalled that at the beginning of this year, a government package of measures was adopted, including 30 initiatives to protect citizens from cybercriminals. It has already entered into force. In particular, a ban was introduced on the use of instant messengers for employees of government agencies, banks and telecom operators when interacting with clients. In addition, messages with access codes to government services are now blocked if the subscriber is talking on the phone when sending such a message.

    A law on criminal liability for droppers – individuals who provide their bank cards or e-wallets for the transfer of illegal funds – has also come into force. Criminal liability will only apply to those who knowingly received a reward for transferring details to criminals. The fact of payment is the key evidence of intent. Those who transferred the data for free (for example, out of ignorance or under pressure) will not be punished.

    “The government is systematically working to improve the level of security for citizens in the digital environment, and Roskomnadzor plays a significant role in it. The agency promptly identifies and blocks fraudsters’ schemes. Last year alone, more than 44,000 fraudulent websites were blocked, and Roskomnadzor stops over a million suspicious calls every day. Now, together with Roskomnadzor and other interested agencies, we are working on additional measures to combat fraudsters on the Internet,” said Dmitry Grigorenko.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Ministry of Economic Development has updated measures to support the socio-economic development of Siberia

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Ministry of Economic Development (Russia) – Ministry of Economic Development (Russia) –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Deputy Minister of Economic Development of Russia Svyatoslav Sorokin took part in a meeting on the socio-economic development of the Siberian Federal District, which was held on July 8 in Omsk under the chairmanship of Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Dmitry Patrushev. The event was attended by the Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Siberian Federal District Anatoly Seryshev, heads of regions, representatives of federal ministries and key industry companies.

    “Our main goal is to create opportunities to accelerate the pace of economic growth in Siberian regions, and, of course, to improve the quality of life of people. First of all, we control the implementation of the government’s Strategy for the Development of the Federal District until 2035. About two trillion rubles have already been attracted to its activities, and more than 42 thousand jobs have been created,” said Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Dmitry Patrushev during the meeting.

    Svyatoslav Sorokin presented a report on amendments to the plan for implementing the Strategy for Socioeconomic Development of the Siberian Federal District. On behalf of the Government, the revised document was submitted on June 27. The updated plan includes individual development programs for the subjects, as well as new investment and infrastructure projects.

    The proposed measures will increase the volume of investment in the district’s economy to 18 trillion rubles, as well as create over 195 thousand jobs. The plan is synchronized with the updated national projects and will be further specified within the framework of the implementation of the Strategy for Spatial Development of the Russian Federation until 2030. Special attention is paid to the development of key settlements: a list of 294 key settlements in the regions of Siberia has been approved.

    During the meeting, an assessment was also given of the implementation of the so-called curatorship projects – these are priority regional initiatives, for the implementation of which the leadership of the Ministry of Economic Development is personally responsible. According to Svyatoslav Sorokin, these projects play a key role in the development of infrastructure, industry, tourism and other sectors. Thanks to these initiatives, over 21 thousand jobs have been created in the district and about 1.4 trillion rubles of extra-budgetary investments have been attracted.

    The report paid special attention to the work on forming a list of priority investment projects in Siberia. On the instructions of the Government, the Ministry of Economic Development, together with other departments, selected 103 projects that have the greatest socio-economic effect on the development of the district’s subjects. The priority list included initiatives with an investment volume of over 3 billion rubles, as well as curatorship projects, industry clusters and initiatives in the field of rare earth metals, agreed upon with the Ministry of Industry and Trade of Russia.

    Particular attention was paid to the implementation of the Spatial Development Strategy (SDS) in the Siberian Federal District. As Svyatoslav Sorokin emphasized, Siberia is in the focus of the federal agenda: by 2030, the target indicators are defined as stabilization of the population at a level no lower than 2023, an increase in the district’s share in housing commissioning to 15.4%, as well as an increase in the ratio of gross regional product per capita to 83.6% of the Russian average.

    To achieve these indicators, the key priority of the SPR is the development of support settlements (SSC). The list approved by the Government Commission for Regional Development included 294 settlements in the territory of the Siberian Federal District.

    “Development of key settlements is a key point of concentration of efforts in Siberia. We see that it is in these territories that the potential for economic growth, improvement of quality of life and increase of investment attractiveness is concentrated. It is important that all support measures are built with an orientation towards spatial logic of development – so that investments work for the comprehensive development of territories, and not pointwise, without taking into account connections and prospects,” emphasized Deputy Minister of Economic Development of Russia Svyatoslav Sorokin.

    Also, within the framework of the implementation of the Spatial Development Strategy and in pursuance of the message of the President of the Russian Federation, the Ministry of Economic Development, together with the regions, is forming a list of cities for the development of master plans. This process is being carried out in the development of decisions of the strategic session of the Government and should be completed by January 2026.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Alexey Overchuk took part in the meeting of the Council of the Eurasian Economic Commission

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    A wide range of issues aimed at improving the business climate in the EAEU and improving the legal framework of the union were considered.

    Alexey Overchuk took part in the meeting of the Council of the Eurasian Economic Commission

    Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Overchuk took part in a meeting of the Council of the Eurasian Economic Commission. In a videoconference format, the meeting participants considered a wide range of issues aimed at improving the business climate in the EAEU and improving the legal framework of the union.

    The parties approved a program for the development of exchange trading on the common exchange (organized) market of goods within the Eurasian Economic Union.

    Changes have been made to the Rules for Registration and Expertise of Safety, Quality and Efficiency of Medical Products. The changes provide for clarification of the registration procedure when it is necessary to include a new type of medical product in the nomenclature of medical products of the Union, as well as adjustment of the list of documents required for registration of medical products.

    The meeting also introduced amendments to the Union’s Unified Quarantine Phytosanitary Requirements aimed at protecting apple and pear seedlings and cuttings from pathogens causing harmful plant diseases.

    The commission’s reports on the progress of the formation of common oil and oil product markets and a common gas market of the EAEU by the end of 2024 were approved. The report on the implementation of the instruction of the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council on the climate agenda within the EAEU was considered.

    The annual report of the commission on the transfer and distribution of import customs duties between the budgets of the EAEU member states in 2024 was reviewed. According to the results of 2024, there was an increase in the receipt of import customs duties in the budgets of the member states; compared to 2023, the revenues of the budgets of the member states from import customs duties increased from 14.8 billion to 15.2 billion dollars.

    The meeting participants also approved the draft agendas for two meetings of the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council scheduled to be held in August 2025 in the Kyrgyz Republic and in September in the Republic of Belarus.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: State Duma deputies supported the bill “on platforms”

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Ministry of Economic Development (Russia) – Ministry of Economic Development (Russia) –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    The State Duma considered draft federal laws on regulating the platform economy and changes to industry laws in connection with the introduction of new requirements. Deputies discussed the balance of interests of participants in legal relations, the nuances of regulation, and liability for violating the provisions of the future law. Parliamentarians supported the adoption of the bills in the first reading.

    The key discussion took place in the Economic Policy Committee chaired by Maxim Topilin. The main provisions of the draft law were presented by the Minister of Economic Development of Russia Maxim Reshetnikov. According to him, the platform economy is developing rapidly: in the last 4 years alone, online sales have grown 4 times, and 80% of Internet users regularly place orders through platforms. On the one hand, this opens up new opportunities for business, especially for SMEs. On the other hand, large platforms have become de facto regulators of access to the market, not being responsible for the quality of goods and services, and the relations between platforms and the self-employed and individual entrepreneurs remain unregulated.

    “All this determined the emergence of a strong public demand for the creation of clear rules for the operation of platforms. And in order to respond to it, on behalf of the Government, draft laws were developed. The proposed regulation and clear set of rules are aimed at protecting the interests of all market participants and ensuring its further growth. This is especially important for accelerating, on behalf of the President, structural changes in the economy,” emphasized Maxim Reshetnikov.

    The new regulation introduces uniform standards for platforms: verification of sellers, control over the quality of goods, transparency of contracts and protection of the rights of entrepreneurs. For example, platforms will not be able to impose discounts without the consent of the seller, and disputes can be resolved not only in court, but also through the pre-trial appeal mechanism.

    The regulation will come into effect in 2027, so that businesses and platforms have time to adapt. The intermediary digital platforms themselves will be included in a separate register, which will ensure flexibility of regulation for all players, noted Maxim Reshetnikov. The criteria for their selection will be determined by the Government of the Russian Federation. Among the main ones discussed are the volume of transactions, the number of active users and sellers.

    “Today we considered issues related to ensuring, first of all, additional requirements for platforms and obligations that will be established for platforms. This includes the formation of product cards, interaction with labeling, certification, and licensing systems. On the one hand, this will protect consumer rights and, on the other hand, will certainly create a unified legal regulation. It is very important, and everyone noted this, that laws allow a very large number of small entrepreneurs who previously could not break into retail chains to very quickly find their niche thanks to platform technologies. This is an additional incentive to support, including small businesses, the development of jobs and the formation of a small economy in different regions,” Maxim Topilin, Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Economic Policy, commented on the meeting.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Marat Khusnullin: More than 322 million trips have been recorded on the Central Ring Road since the launch of traffic

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    On July 8, 2021, Russian President Vladimir Putin launched traffic along the entire length of the Central Ring Road (TsKAD) in the Moscow Region. The highway has become one of the largest projects in recent years. Since the launch of traffic on this highway, motorists have made more than 322 million trips, Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin reported.

    “The Central Ring Road, which is over 340 km long, is of great importance for the economy, logistics and ecology of Moscow, the Moscow Region and neighboring regions. This modern highway has allowed transit transport to be taken beyond the 13 urban districts of the Moscow Region and directly connected the regional districts. It has a high throughput capacity and provides all the necessary conditions for safe travel. With the opening of the Central Ring Road, it was possible to significantly reduce the load on the Moscow Ring Road, the A-107 and A-108 highways, increase the transport accessibility of the capital’s airports for residents of the region, and connect key highways, including regional and federal highways of the Moscow Region. We see that the Central Ring Road is in demand among motorists. Since the launch of traffic along its entire length, more than 322 million trips have been recorded on the road,” said Marat Khusnullin.

    The Deputy Prime Minister added that travel on toll sections of the Central Ring Road allows for travel time to be reduced by almost three times compared to alternative routes. This was made possible by the absence of traffic lights and pedestrian crossings, as well as at-grade intersections with other roads. The total length of these sections is 264 km.

    The head of the state company Avtodor, Vyacheslav Petushenko, noted that the most popular section of the Central Ring Road since the launch of traffic along its entire length remains the section between the M-4 Don highway and the Kaluga Highway. The average daily traffic intensity along it is about 19 thousand trips.

    “The section from Domodedovo to the M-7 Volga highway is in second place. Over the past few years, an average of about 17.5 thousand trips per day have been recorded here. The bypass of the village of Malye Vyazemy, which was put into operation in December last year, rounds out the top three. It immediately became popular among drivers, and the average daily traffic intensity on it today reaches 14.1 thousand trips. Traffic on the section from M-7 Volga to M-11 Neva also remains consistently high. On average, 10.6 thousand trips per day are recorded here. On the section from M-10 Rossiya to M-11 Neva, about 7 thousand trips per day are recorded,” Vyacheslav Petushenko noted.

    Work on upgrading the Central Ring Road and improving convenience for motorists continues. Construction of a transport interchange at the intersection with Dmitrovskoe Highway is currently underway.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Marat Khusnullin: About 9 thousand parks have been improved in Russia since 2017

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    City Garden, Omsk

    July 8, 2025

    Embankment of the park “Berega”, Belgorod

    July 8, 2025

    Previous news Next news

    City Garden, Omsk

    The Russian government continues its systematic work aimed at transforming public spaces across the country. These tasks are being addressed within the framework of the federal project “Formation of a Comfortable Urban Environment”, which since 2025 has been part of the national project “Infrastructure for Life”, Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin reported.

    “The Russian construction industry faces serious challenges in creating a comfortable urban environment. Improvement of public spaces is an important part of regional development. Thanks to such work, populated areas are transformed, the quality of life of people is improved, spaces for walks, sports, family recreation and communication are created. This work corresponds to the priorities outlined by the President of Russia. And it is especially symbolic to talk about this on the Day of Family, Love and Fidelity, which symbolizes strong family ties. Since 2017, within the framework of the federal project “Formation of a Comfortable Urban Environment” in Russia, about 9 thousand parks have been improved. Each improved park is a concern for families and the future of our children,” said Marat Khusnullin.

    During the improvement, a comprehensive approach is used to create modern, functional and aesthetically thought-out public spaces. The needs of all age groups are taken into account, including children, the elderly, and people with disabilities. Recreation areas, playgrounds and sports grounds, bike paths, convenient navigation and landscaping are thought out.

    “Since 2025, the federal project “Formation of a Comfortable Urban Environment” by decision of the President of Russia has been retained as part of the national project “Infrastructure for Life”. This year, it is planned to improve 5 thousand public areas, of which over 1.3 thousand are parks. As part of the All-Russian competition of the best projects for creating a comfortable urban environment, work is underway to improve 49 parks,” noted the head of the Ministry of Construction Irek Faizullin.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dmitry Chernyshenko, Valery Falkov and the head of Rosmolodezh Grigory Gurov congratulated Russians on the Day of Family, Love and Fidelity

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko, Minister of Education and Science Valery Falkov and Head of Rosmolodezh Grigory Gurov congratulated Russians on Family, Love and Fidelity Day and spoke about support measures for families in the educational sphere and youth policy.

    “As our President Vladimir Putin said, family in Russia has been and remains the highest value. Today, there are almost 26 thousand student families in universities alone, 13 thousand of whom have children. The state will continue to support them within the framework of the national projects “Youth and Children” and “Family”. Universities are opening mother-and-child rooms, short-term stay groups for children, and universities are providing financial assistance to families. My family also began in my student years. And I want to wish young people not to be afraid to take responsibility, to value each other and to be successful in all areas,” said Dmitry Chernyshenko.

    The support measures at universities also include the transfer of women who have given birth to a child during their studies and those studying with children from a fee-paying to a budget place, assistance in finding employment, free medical services for student families and vouchers to sanatoriums, the possibility of switching to an individual curriculum, information, psychological, legal support for young families, and others. Universities are opening spaces for students’ children – mother-and-child rooms and short-term stay groups for children. Today, 205 of them are already functioning in 151 universities.

    “Family is a source of strength for each of us and the foundation of a full-fledged society. That is why supporting the family, including student families, and preserving traditional family values is the most important part of our country’s state policy,” said Minister of Education and Science Valery Falkov.

    The All-Russian Forum of Young Student Families is being held for the first time at the Gzhel State University, with the participation of families of young teachers and student families. Within the framework of the forum, the student family of Russia – 2025 – the absolute winner of the All-Russian competition “Student Families of Russia” will be announced.

    In addition, Rosmolodezh, the Movement of the First, and other organizations and institutions in the field of youth policy are actively working to strengthen traditional spiritual and moral values among the younger generation and increase the prestige of the family.

    “Young people are often concerned about how to combine their studies and professional development with parenthood. Rosmolodezh pays special attention to this, including within the framework of the national project “Youth and Children”, a modern infrastructure for young families is being created. Thematic programs are held at federal and regional forums. Thus, in May of this year alone, about 243 thousand families attended our events across the country. It is symbolic that the thematic shift “Family” of our flagship forum “Territory of Meanings” is launched on Family, Love and Fidelity Day. This shift caused a real stir – we received more than 4 thousand applications from young families, and today 100 families from different regions of Russia met at the forum to discuss how to preserve traditional values and bring back into fashion the creation of large families,” said the head of Rosmolodezh Grigory Gurov.

    On behalf of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Rosmolodezh is implementing the Region for the Young program. Over the past two years, thanks to the program, spaces for young families have been created in 156 youth centers in 66 regions of Russia. This year, another 104 youth centers are planned to be renovated, and 94 next year.

    In addition, a wide range of projects and programs are presented in which entire families can participate. Thus, in 2023, the year-round youth educational historical and cultural center “Istoki” was opened in the city of Pechory in the Pskov region and Sevastopol – this is the first year-round center that can be visited by families with children. This year, trips are planned, including for the families of military personnel and volunteers of humanitarian missions. Together with their parents, children study the history of their native family, conduct research and get acquainted with the military feat of their ancestors during the Great Patriotic War as part of the all-Russian competition “Family Memory”. The winners go on patriotic tours to places of military or labor glory of a relative.

    Registration is open for the second season of the presidential platform competition “Russia – the Land of Opportunities” “It’s in Our Family”, which was launched in 2023 by the President of Russia during the open lesson “Conversations about the Important”, dedicated to Knowledge Day.

    The Rodnye-Lyubinye family community of the Movement of the First and Rosmolodezh already unites more than 215 thousand families across the country, participants of the Movement of the First, their parents, grandparents. One of the key tasks for 2025 is to expand the community and involve students and young families in the work. This year, the community will continue to implement traditional events: summer gatherings of the Rodnye-Lyubinye family community in the Smolensk region, the Rodnye-Lyubinye family art quarter at the Tavrida.Art festival, and the Rodnye-Lyubinye all-Russian family forum.

    Special nomination

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dmitry Patrushev visited Omsk region on a working visit

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Dmitry Patrushev visited Omsk Region on a working visit. With Minister of Natural Resources Alexander Kozlov (left) and the region’s governor Vitaly Khotsenko (right)

    July 8, 2025

    Dmitry Patrushev, as part of a working visit to Omsk Oblast, took part in the ceremonial launch of a complex of biological treatment facilities. With Minister of Natural Resources Alexander Kozlov (left), regional governor Vitaly Khotsenko and Chairman of the Management Board of PJSC Gazprom Neft Alexander Dyukov (right)

    July 8, 2025

    As part of his working visit, Dmitry Patrushev met with the Governor of the Omsk Region, Vitaly Khotsenko

    July 8, 2025

    Previous news Next news

    Dmitry Patrushev visited Omsk Region on a working visit. With Minister of Natural Resources Alexander Kozlov (left) and the region’s governor Vitaly Khotsenko (right)

    Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Patrushev visited Omsk Oblast on a working visit. Together with the region’s governor Vitaly Khotsenko and the chairman of the board of PJSC Gazprom Neft Alexander Dyukov, the deputy prime minister took part in the ceremonial launch of a complex of biological treatment facilities.

    “We are launching the Biosphere complex, a system of modern treatment facilities at the Omsk Oil Refinery. This largest environmental project of Gazprom Neft has been implemented as part of the Ecology national project. Investments amounted to about 30 billion rubles. Thanks to innovative technologies, the complex will effectively purify industrial wastewater, significantly reduce the use of river water and reduce the load on the city’s communal infrastructure. I would like to note that Biosphere is an example of effective interaction between Russian developers and manufacturers of technology and equipment. 185 domestic companies participated in the project. This plant is one of the most powerful in Russia in its field,” said Dmitry Patrushev.

    The Deputy Prime Minister noted that over 135 billion rubles have been allocated for large-scale modernization of the Omsk Oil Refinery in recent years. As a result, the obligations under the federal project “Clean Air” have been almost completely fulfilled. Work in this area continues within the framework of the national project “Ecological Well-Being”.

    As part of his working visit, Dmitry Patrushev also held a meeting with the Governor of Omsk Region, Vitaly Khotsenko.

    “Omsk Oblast is an economically strong region of Siberia. Its development traditionally relies on the industrial sector, which accounts for more than 20% of the production structure. This is oil refining with petrochemistry, mechanical engineering, including defense engineering. The transport complex is of great importance. In addition, Omsk Oblast is one of the important agricultural regions of Siberia. The Russian Government allocated more than 2 billion rubles to the region in 2025 for the development of the agro-industrial complex and rural areas. The agricultural production index in Omsk Oblast in 2024 was 117%, which is a very high figure. The region produces significant volumes of grain and oilseeds. Further strengthening of its positions is certainly associated with the activities of the Strategy for the Socioeconomic Development of Siberia, which was approved by the Russian Government. A number of projects are being implemented in Omsk Oblast within its framework, which in the medium term will create more than a thousand jobs,” said Dmitry Patrushev.

    The Deputy Prime Minister noted that Omsk Region is actively involved in environmental protection activities. In the previous six years, about 8 billion rubles from the federal budget were allocated for this. This work continues within the framework of the national project “Environmental Well-Being”, the implementation of which began this year. Improvement of water bodies is also planned – for example, construction of a hydroelectric complex on the Irtysh has begun and cleaning of the riverbed is planned.

    Dmitry Patrushev paid special attention to monitoring the fulfillment of obligations in the field of solid municipal waste management. As part of his working visit, the Deputy Prime Minister also visited the Sovetskaya landfill reclamation facility in the region.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Alexander Novak held a meeting of the subcommittee on increasing the sustainability of the housing construction industry

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak held the eleventh meeting of the subcommittee on increasing the stability of the financial sector and individual sectors of the economy, where the situation in the sphere of housing construction was discussed.

    The event was attended by Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin, Minister of Economic Development Maxim Reshetnikov, Minister of Energy Sergei Tsivilev, representatives of other federal government bodies, investment banks, organizations in the housing construction and coal industry sectors, as well as the Moscow city authorities.

    “This industry requires close attention. It is necessary to discuss the current situation, the progress of implementing decisions already made, as well as the advisability of taking additional support measures,” said Alexander Novak, opening the meeting.

    Participants examined in detail the dynamics of launching new projects, housing sales, issuing mortgage loans, as well as the financial and economic state of systemically important organizations operating in the industry.

    Following the discussion, the Deputy Prime Minister instructed the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Economic Development, together with the Ministry of Construction, to work out the measures presented at the meeting to ensure the sustainability of the construction industry.

    The members of the subcommittee also supported the initiative to expand the boundaries of the Bachatsky coal mine in the Kemerovo Region. This will allow maintaining the current level of energy coal production at the deposit and supporting the metallurgy market, whose enterprises consume the mine’s output.

    In addition, at the meeting, based on proposals from industry departments, targeted adjustments were made to the list of systemically important organizations of the Russian economy.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Denis Manturov: Indonesia to become Innoprom partner country in 2026

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Denis Manturov spoke about the development of international industrial cooperation at the strategic session “Technological Leadership: Industrial Breakthrough” within the framework of “Innoprom-2025”

    July 8, 2025

    Denis Manturov presented the national industrial award “Industry”, the winner of which was the “Kursk Electrical Equipment Plant”

    July 8, 2025

    Previous news Next news

    Denis Manturov spoke about the development of international industrial cooperation at the strategic session “Technological Leadership: Industrial Breakthrough” within the framework of “Innoprom-2025”

    First Deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov spoke about the development of international industrial cooperation at the strategic session “Technological Leadership: Industrial Breakthrough” within the framework of the Innoprom-2025 exhibition. He emphasized that Russia does not seek complete autonomy and is open to cooperation with friendly countries, primarily the states of the Eurasian Economic Union, the CIS, BRICS, Latin America, Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

    “The fact that our partner country this year is Saudi Arabia once again shows that the Middle East is a strategic direction for us. Next year, Indonesia will be Innoprom’s partner country. It is the largest Muslim country in the world with a population of about 300 million people. It is rapidly growing, with a young population. And we are actively developing cooperation with this country. I expect that our entrepreneurs, our enterprises will actively form their agenda for the coming year in order to demonstrate new projects and cooperation with this country,” Denis Manturov noted.

    The First Deputy Prime Minister also presented the national industrial award “Industry”, the winner of which was the Kursk Electrical Equipment Plant. The enterprise has developed a modern line of OptiMat D circuit breakers. The series has versions for operation on rolling stock of rail transport and trolleybuses, and is also licensed for delivery to nuclear power plants.

    Let us recall that in 2015, Industry was awarded the status of a Russian Government Prize.

    The award ceremony for the winner of the prize is held annually on the sidelines of the international industrial exhibition “Innoprom”.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dmitry Patrushev: Our goal is to improve the quality of life of people in the Siberian Federal District

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Dmitry Patrushev, as part of a working visit to the Omsk Region, held a meeting on incident No. 62 “Implementation of measures to develop the Siberian Federal District”

    July 8, 2025

    Dmitry Patrushev, as part of a working visit to the Omsk Region, held a meeting of Incident No. 62 “Implementation of measures to develop the Siberian Federal District”

    July 8, 2025

    Dmitry Patrushev, as part of a working visit to the Omsk Region, held a meeting on incident No. 62 “Implementation of measures to develop the Siberian Federal District”

    July 8, 2025

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    Dmitry Patrushev, as part of a working visit to the Omsk Region, held a meeting on incident No. 62 “Implementation of measures to develop the Siberian Federal District”

    Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Patrushev held a meeting on incident No. 62 “Implementation of measures to develop the Siberian Federal District” as part of a working visit to Omsk Oblast. It was attended by the Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of Russia in the Siberian Federal District Anatoly Seryshev, the heads of the Ministry of Natural Resources, Rosprirodnadzor, Rosleskhoz, the leadership of relevant departments and regions of the Siberian Federal District, as well as business representatives.

    “Our main goal is to create opportunities to accelerate the pace of economic growth in Siberian regions, and, of course, to improve the quality of life of people. First of all, we control the implementation of the government strategy for the development of the federal district until 2035. About 2 trillion rubles have already been attracted to its activities, and more than 42 thousand jobs have been created. In the future, the total volume of investments should exceed 18 trillion rubles,” said Dmitry Patrushev.

    At the last meeting, an agreement was developed on the organization of enterprises in Siberia to ensure a full cycle of work with rare earth metals. As part of the current incident, the participants discussed the work of the expert group on the formation of a complex for their deep processing. The main topic of this meeting was the prospects for the development of the forestry complex in the district. As the Deputy Prime Minister noted, Siberia is one of the leaders here.

    “A third of the total Russian timber volumes are harvested in Siberia. This result is achieved by almost one and a half thousand local enterprises. In addition, about 30 priority forestry projects are being implemented in the district to create and modernize processing capacities. The total investment volume exceeds 440 billion rubles,” Dmitry Patrushev emphasized.

    Siberia has significant resources for increasing production volumes and organizing a full chain of production output, including those with a high degree of processing. However, today, up-to-date forest management data covers only 35% of the intensive zone of Siberian forests.

    The Deputy Prime Minister reported that the Ministry of Natural Resources is developing a bill that gives the right to finance forest management at the expense of regional budgets, and also provides for the lease of areas for which forest management materials have not been updated for more than 10 years. Business, in turn, is obliged to update these materials within two years. The combination of these measures will speed up the updating of information on the country’s forest reserves and improve the efficiency of forest resource management.

    At the meeting it was noted that Rosleskhoz is working on the possibility of implementing a pilot project on forest management in two Siberian regions – the leaders of the district in timber harvesting – Irkutsk Oblast and Krasnoyarsk Krai.

    Following the incident, the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Federal Forestry Agency, together with the governments of Krasnoyarsk Krai and Irkutsk Oblast, were instructed to determine forestry areas in which pilot forest management projects will be implemented, as well as the timeframes for their implementation. The innovation will allow joint efforts to cover forest management and involve more areas in circulation.

    Dmitry Patrushev noted that the government commission on regional development has identified around 300 key settlements in the Siberian Federal District as a serious basis for developing Siberian territories. The Deputy Prime Minister instructed to give this network priority attention and invest in their infrastructure.

    The Ministry of Economic Development, in turn, will complete the revision of the plan for the implementation of the Strategy for the Socioeconomic Development of the Siberian Federal District, taking into account the activities of the Strategy for the Spatial Development of the Russian Federation.

    Work on the integrated development of the Siberian Federal District (the Republics of Altai, Tyva and Khakassia, the Altai and Krasnoyarsk Territories, the Irkutsk, Kemerovo, Novosibirsk, Omsk and Tomsk Regions) is being carried out within the framework of incident No. 62. The choice of this format of interdepartmental interaction was initiated by the Deputy Prime Minister as the curator of the district and supported by the Chairman of the Government. It will allow the aggregation of activities of all regional development programs and the maximum synergistic effect from their implementation.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Tianzhou-8 cargo spacecraft re-enters Earth’s atmosphere

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, July 9 (Xinhua) — China’s Tianzhou-8 cargo spacecraft has re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere in a controlled manner. Most of the spacecraft’s components burned up during re-entry, and a small amount of debris fell into pre-designated sea areas. -0-

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Chairman of the Board of the Atameken National Chamber of Entrepreneurs Raimbek Batalov on the 3rd China International Supply Chain Expo

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Russians. Ori.org.KN | 09. 07. 2025

    Keywords: CISCE

    Source: russian.china.org.cn

    Chairman of the Board of the Atameken National Chamber of Entrepreneurs Raimbek Batalov on the 3rd China International Supply Chain Exhibition Chairman of the Board of the Atameken National Chamber of Entrepreneurs Raimbek Batalov on the 3rd China International Supply Chain Exhibition

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Typhoon Danas makes landfall in East China for the third time

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    HANGZHOU, July 9 (Xinhua) — Typhoon Danas, the fourth typhoon this year, made landfall for the third time in a coastal area of Rui’an city in east China’s Zhejiang Province on Tuesday night, local authorities confirmed.

    The center of the tropical storm made landfall around 11:45 p.m. on July 8, packing winds of up to 20 meters per second and a minimum central pressure of at least 992 hectopascals, according to the provincial meteorological observatory.

    Earlier, Danas made landfall in Taiwan for the first time early Monday morning and a second time in Dongtou district of Wenzhou city, Zhejiang province, at 9:25 p.m. Tuesday. -0-

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: 7 days countdown to the 3rd China International Supply Chain Promotion Expo

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Russians. Ori.org.KN | 09. 07. 2025

    Keywords: CISCE

    Source: russian.china.org.cn

    7 Days Countdown to the 3rd China International Supply Chain Promotion Expo 7 Days Countdown to the 3rd China International Supply Chain Promotion Expo

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: 07/16/2025 the site may be unavailable in the first half of the day Vladivostok time due to an update

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Solid Bank – Solid Bank –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Dear customers!

    We inform you that on 16.07.2025 the bank’s websiteVBV. SOLIDBANK.rumay be unavailable for approximately 3 to 72 hours – technical work is being carried out to update the official website of JSC Solid Bank.

    For any information about the bank’s products, we recommend that you contact the Bank’s toll-free hotline: 88007755606.

    We also recommend that you save tabs with links to Internet banking and install the SolidPAY mobile application:

    Solidpay 

    bank2 for legal entitieshttps://ib.solidbank.ru:8443/ibank2/

    We apologize for the inconvenience! We strive to become better for you!

    Share the news on social networks

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Trump signals new sanctions on Russia

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    U.S. President Donald Trump said Tuesday he has approved sending additional weapons to Ukraine and is considering new sanctions on Russia.

    “We’re sending some defensive weapons to Ukraine, and I’ve approved that,” Trump said during a cabinet meeting at the White House.

    Trump also expressed dissatisfaction with Russian President Vladimir Putin. “I’m not happy with Putin. I can tell you that much right now,” Trump said, noting that Russian and Ukrainian soldiers are dying in the thousands.

    Trump said he is considering whether to support a bipartisan Senate bill that will impose sweeping sanctions on Russia. 

    MIL OSI China News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE training on arms control enhances border security in Turkmenistan

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE training on arms control enhances border security in Turkmenistan

    Opening of an OSCE-organized training course on Combatting Illicit Trafficking of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW), Conventional Ammunition (CA) and Explosives, Ashgabat, 4 July 2025, OSCE (OSCE) Photo details

    An OSCE-organized training course on Combatting Illicit Trafficking of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW), Conventional Ammunition (CA) and Explosives took place from 1 to 4 July 2025 in Ashgabat.
    The OSCE Centre in Ashgabat, in close co-operation with the Conflict Prevention Centre/Forum for Security Co-operation of the OSCE Secretariat, organized the course to strengthen the existing institutional capacities of border, customs, police and other law enforcement bodies in the area of combating illicit trafficking of SALW, CA and Explosives.
    The training course presented the Frontex Handbook on Firearms and shared European and international good practices and experiences in the fight against illicit trafficking of SALW, ammunition and explosives at the borders. In addition, this course offered comprehensive training in SALW/CA identification, documentation, post-seizure record-keeping and tracing, focusing on the target groups.
    In his address at the opening of the training course, William Leaf, Acting Head of the OSCE Centre in Ashgabat, said: “As the largest regional security organization in the world, representing one billion people, the OSCE supports all 57 participating States in their efforts to improve comprehensive security through a number of OSCE commitments related to border security and management.”
    “Illicit trafficking and uncontrolled spread of SALW, ammunition, and explosives—pose threats across the OSCE region, and the OSCE works with the Organization’s 57 participating States to mitigate these risks,” stressed Leaf.
    “As frontline defenders, border and customs officers play a key role in identifying and preventing such threats,” he added.
    The course was delivered by international experts from the German Bundeswehr Verification Centre (BwVC), Interpol, and Forum for Security Co-operation of the OSCE Secretariat.  Applying concrete example-based exercises, the experts involved trainees in practical exercises that were carefully tailored to control measures at the border crossing points and enhance co-operation between various services at the borders, in particular between border police/ guards and customs.
    The training course was organized within the framework of the Centre’s extrabudgetary project “Strengthening State Border Service Capacities of Turkmenistan” and financially supported by the Government of Germany. The training efforts reflect the OSCE’s commitment to significantly supporting the fight against the proliferation of illicit firearms and related threats.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE leads regional effort to prevent youth violence across South-Eastern Europe

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE leads regional effort to prevent youth violence across South-Eastern Europe

    As peer violence and early criminal behavior among young people become growing concerns, the OSCE held an intensive two-day regional training in Jahorina, Bosnia and Herzegovina, on 2 and 3 July. The event brought together key frontline professionals from across South-Eastern Europe to strengthen efforts to prevent youth violence.
    Organized by the OSCE Transnational Threats Department and the Office of the Co-ordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental Activities, the training equipped 23 social workers, educators, youth officers, and law enforcement representatives from Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro with practical tools to prevent and de-escalate violence among youth.
    The training focused on real-life challenges that professionals face in schools and communities, aiming to building trust, resilience, and supportive environments for young people. Participants explored the root causes of youth violence, from family issues and peer pressure to the influence of social media. Through interactive group work, simulations, and expert-led exercises, they learned how to spot early warning signs, manage conflict, and encourage mutual respect.  A key goal of the training was to strengthen regional collaboration and promote shared approaches to preventing youth violence.
    “This training on youth violence prevention was a valuable opportunity to exchange experiences with colleagues from the region facing similar challenges,” said Arijana Muzaferovic, Director of the Centre for Social Work in Bosanska Krupa, Bosnia and Herzegovina. “Through practical exercises, we explored concrete ways to identify early signs of risk and provide timely, meaningful support to young people before problems escalate into violence,” she added.
    Participants concluded the training with concrete ideas on how to apply the lessons learned in their local contexts and how to enhance co-operation across borders.
    The training was part of the OSCE-wide multi-year extrabudgetary project “Enhancing youth crime and drug use prevention through education on legality and awareness campaigns addressing threats of organized crime and corruption”, funded by Italy with additional support from Andorra, Finland, Germany, Norway, Poland and Thailand.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE study visit on Small Arms and Light Weapons strengthens co-operation between Sweden and Ukraine

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE study visit on Small Arms and Light Weapons strengthens co-operation between Sweden and Ukraine

    Ukrainian specialists working on small arms and light weapons (SALW) control during a study visit to the Swedish National Police Force, Stockholm, 26 June 2025. (OSCE) Photo details

    From 24 to 26 June 2025, the OSCE’s Conflict Prevention Centre facilitated a study visit to the Swedish National Police Force in Stockholm for Ukrainian specialists working on small arms and light weapons (SALW) control. Participants included representatives from the National Police of Ukraine, State Border Guard Service, State Customs Service and Security Service.
    Hosting the visit, Swedish specialists presented their national firearms legislation and shared good practices on border management, detection methods, forensic analysis and investigations of cases of illicit trafficking of SALW. The visit strengthened collaboration and professional relationships between Ukraine and Sweden in firearms control, countering smuggling, and border security.
    By enhancing the authorities’ skills and capacities, this initiative boosted the co-ordination efforts within the National Firearms Focal Points and the National Coordination Centre of Ukraine, recently established to strengthen collaboration and improve response to security threats.
    The visit was organized under the OSCE’s extrabudgetary project supporting Ukrainian authorities in preventing and combating illicit trafficking in weapons, ammunition, and explosives. It aimed to foster international collaboration and enhance Ukrainian authorities’ expertise in this field.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE human rights office voices deep concern over increased pressure on civil society and political dissent in Georgia, reaffirms commitment to support

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE human rights office voices deep concern over increased pressure on civil society and political dissent in Georgia, reaffirms commitment to support

    OSCE human rights office voices deep concern over increased pressure on civil society and political dissent in Georgia, reaffirms commitment to support | OSCE

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    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE and the United Nations Countering Terrorist Travel (‘CT Travel’) Programme provide expert support to Turkmenistan with establishing an Advance Passenger Information (API) system

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE and the United Nations Countering Terrorist Travel (‘CT Travel’) Programme provide expert support to Turkmenistan with establishing an Advance Passenger Information (API) system

    OSCE and the United Nations Countering Terrorist Travel (‘CT Travel’) Programme provide expert support to Turkmenistan with establishing an Advance Passenger Information (API) system | OSCE

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    Home Newsroom News and press releases OSCE and the United Nations Countering Terrorist Travel (‘CT Travel’) Programme provide expert support to Turkmenistan with establishing an Advance Passenger Information (API) system

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Moscow Exchange: Risk parameters changes on Securities market

    Source: Moscow Exchange –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    CCP NCC changes the following risk parameters on Securities market starting from July,9th 2025:

    Securities market:

    Market risk rates and concentration limits:

    Underlying Current concentration limits, pcs Concentration limits from July, 9th 2025
    LK1 LK2 LK1 LK2
    OZON 67 009 335 045 45 419 227 095

    Please note; this information is raw content received directly from the information source. It is an accurate account of what the source claims, and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: President Erdoğan to Visit Azerbaijan

    Source: Republic of Turkey

    President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will visit Khankendi, Azerbaijan, on July 4, 2025, to attend the 17th Summit of the Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO).
    Views on climate change, trade, transportation networks and ECO’s reform as well as on cooperation among member countries will be exchanged at the Summit, which will be held under the theme of “New ECO Vision for a Sustainable and Climate-Resilient Future”.
    President Erdoğan will address the Summit session and hold bilateral talks with leaders.
    In addition to the heads of state and government of the member countries, observers, including the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, and representatives of international organizations will attend the Summit.
    Respectfully announced to the public.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Highlights – 14-15 July: Danish Presidency, US, Economic Security, Indonesia, Ukraine and Moldova – Committee on International Trade

    Source: European Parliament

    On 15 July, Members will exchange with Danish Minister for Foreign Affairs Lars Løkke Rasmussen on the priorities of the Danish Presidency for trade policy. On 14 July Members will jointly exchange on the state of play of EU-US relations and consider the INTA opinion to the AFET own initiative report on EU-US political relations. Members will vote on the INTA opinion to the JURI report on the CSDDD Omnibus proposal.

    Members will also vote on the draft recommendation on the accession of Vanuatu to the Interim Partnership Agreement between the European Community, of the one part, and the Pacific States, of the other part.

    During a joint INTA-ITRE meeting, the Commission will present the proposal on the phasing out of Russian natural gas imports and improving monitoring of potential energy dependencies.

    Members will exchange on the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement between the EU and Indonesia.

    INTA will hold a public hearing on “Trade and economic security: navigating protectionism and geopolitical challenges in an unpredictable world order” (see separate item).

    Members will consider the draft resolution and consent recommendation for the Digital Trade Agreement between the EU and Singapore.

    Members will exchange on the review of the EU’s Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Areas with Ukraine and Moldova.

    INTA will hold an exchange on the EU-UK agreement in respect of Gibraltar.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Highlights – 15 July: Public Hearing on Trade and economic security – Committee on International Trade

    Source: European Parliament

    On Tuesday, 15 July, between 10:30 and 12:30 INTA will organise a Public Hearing on “Trade and economic security: Navigating protectionism and geopolitical challenges in an unpredictable world order”.

    The public hearing will be structured in two panels. The first panel will focus on “partnering and de-risking” whilst the second panel will see interventions from semiconductors, artificial intelligence and quantum technologies stakeholders.

    INTA’s public hearing will focus on the different strands of action in the economic security field, particularly in relation to the Commission’s work on the upcoming economic security doctrine, the development of economic security standards, and dialogue on economic security with third countries. The hearing will also serve to scrutinise ongoing work on the European Economic Security Strategy of June 2023, as well as the set of initiatives presented in January 2024 – specifically concerning the screening of foreign direct investments, outbound investments, export controls, and risk assessments of critical technologies.

    Finally INTA is set to draw-up on an own initiative report on the Role of Trade in strengthening the EU’s economic security.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Trump says US will send more weapons to Ukraine

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Members of U.S. President Donald Trump’s national security team plan to discuss details of shipping weapons to Ukraine on Tuesday, after Trump said the United States would send more weapons to the country, according to media reports.

    “We’re going to send some more weapons. We have to,” Trump said Monday ahead of a dinner with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    In a statement Monday night, Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell confirmed the U.S. Department of Defense will provide further defensive military assistance to Ukraine.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Friday in a post on social media that he had discussed Ukraine’s air defense capabilities in a phone conversation with Trump. They agreed that they would work together to strengthen protecting the skies of Ukraine, he said. 

    MIL OSI China News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Eyesore car park to be sold and redeveloped as ambitious city centre neighbourhood

    Source: City of Manchester

    An underused multistorey car park in Manchester’s iconic Northern Quarter will be transformed into a green, sustainable neighbourhood set to complement the unique and independent ethos of the area.  

    CBRE was appointed by Manchester City Council to market the Church Street site for disposal last year and, following a competitive process, it is proposed that the Council will sell the 1.54acre (0.62ha) Church Street site to Glenbrook, subject to formal decision making and planning permission.  

    The scheme will deliver more than 300 new homes, including 60 (20%) affordable homes, alongside new commercial opportunities and high-quality public spaces.  

    It is expected that the development should respect the heritage and architecture of the historic neighbourhood, helping to enhance the wider area and improve the car park site that has long fallen out of step with the wider locale.  

    The new neighbourhood will also feature four new public squares and green spaces, along with opportunities for pedestrianising the surrounding streets as part of the public realm, and to support active travel options to and through the area. A new flexible community and gallery space will also be part of the proposed development. 

    The commercial space within the ground floor will offer a mix of smaller, more affordable units to ensure local independent businesses can access the neighbourhood – alongside units for food and beverage outlets.  

    The development proposals commit to delivering high levels of sustainability, biodiversity and social value. 

    The final legal negotiations with Glenbrook will conclude over the summer prior to public consultation to inform a future planning application. 

    Leader of the Council Bev Craig said:

    “For too long the Church Street car park has been an eyesore and a barrier to the ongoing success of the Northern Quarter. We want to bring forward a world-class development that has the potential to completely transform this part of the neighbourhood, together with the newest city centre public squares and green spaces.  

    “As part of this, we want to make sure that the businesses that make their home here reflect the independent ethos of this community, complementing and helping to enhance the wider neighbourhood. As such, this development will also celebrate the distinct architectural heritage of the Northern Quarter and honour the history of the area. 

    “We felt Glenbrook shared these ambitions, understood how the development of this site should sit within its context, and create a new neighbourhood that supports the ongoing success of the Northern Quarter and the wider city centre.” 

    Director at Glenbrook, Ian Sherry commented:  

    “The Church St site represents a unique opportunity in the heart of the Northern Quarter, a neighbourhood and community that is alive with energy and creativity, and Glenbrook is delighted to play an important role in its future growth.  

      “To be selected as the Council’s preferred purchaser is a huge accomplishment for our entire project team, who have all immersed themselves in the submission. We look forward to jointly delivering an outstanding project for the Northern Quarter community and supporting the city’s continued growth agenda that confidently projects its future as a globally recognised destination.” 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: What Has Australian Macroeconomic Thought Achieved in the Past Century – And Where Can it Contribute in the Next?

    Source: Airservices Australia

    Introduction

    It is a great honour to address you on the 100th anniversary of the Economics Society of Australia.

    It’s an honour because, over that past century, Australian thinkers have helped develop some of the most important building blocks in open economy macroeconomics – the branch of economics that seeks to understand how the global trading economy works.

    Those were significant – sometimes world-leading – intellectual achievements.

    But they were more than just that. Because they also shaped the policies and institutions that helped Australia navigate the global economy of that period so successfully, delivering wealth and stability for its citizens.

    Indeed Australian macroeconomic research has pulled that trick off twice. First, powering the ideas that lifted the country out of the Great Depression to flourish after the Second World War. And, second, helping to design a reform program that rescued the country from the slump of the 1970s, and led to more than a quarter century of recession-free growth.

    Two Golden Ages, marshalling thought into action.

    But to thrive in the next 100 years, Australia’s researchers will need to go for the hat-trick.

    And that’s because the tectonic plates of the global economic system are once more in flux, as free trade is rolled back; geopolitical alliances shift; climate change accelerates; and productivity growth slows to a crawl in most developed countries.

    Simply coping with such changes will take skill. Turning them to Australia’s advantage – identifying and exploiting new trading structures and sources of growth – will require rich new thinking from Australian academia.

    The good news is that many of today’s policy problems lie at the very heart of Australia’s intellectual comparative advantage. The challenge is whether we can relearn the lessons of the past – drawing in our best talent, strengthening the incentives for policy-relevant research, and forging deep links between academics and policymakers.

    In my remarks today I want to look back at some of those successes of the past century, before posing some questions for the future.

    What is Australian macroeconomic thought?

    But before doing so, I should try to clarify what I mean by Australian macroeconomic thought.

    Is it macroeconomic research about Australia? By Australians? Conducted in Australia? It could be any of the above. But if you wanted a ‘vibe’, in the great Australian tradition of The Castle, I’d suggest three defining features:

    • First, an emphasis on small open economy macroeconomics, with a particular role for the commodities and energy sectors. That reflects the nature of our economy and the challenges we face. But it also has global application: our context is also our comparative advantage.
    • Second, a focus on solving practical real-world policy issues, rather than pushing forward more abstract frontiers. Many influential Australian macroeconomists have also served as senior public policymakers.
    • Third, a world-leading capacity to develop the analytical tools necessary to drive successful economic policy – in particular small open economy quantitative macro-models and macroeconomic data.

    The past 100 years: Two ‘Golden Ages’ of Australian economic thinking

    To illustrate how these themes played out over the past 100 years, I’m going to split the period into two halves. The first lies either side of the Second World War; the second straddles the economic reforms starting from the 1980s. Each in its own way can legitimately be called a Golden Age, in which Australian ideas both advanced the global knowledge frontier and delivered prosperity for Australia.

    The first Golden Age

    The first period, from the birth of the ESA in the 1920s to the late 1960s, saw Australia pull itself out of the depths of the Depression and navigate a world war.

    Australia’s response to these challenges was shaped by its economic context as a small commodity exporter. For much of the period, the growth model relied on expanding exports of raw materials (primarily agricultural), using huge quantities of imported labour and capital. The central question in such an economy was how to maintain both internal and external balance, in the face of external shocks. To achieve these goals, the authorities relied primarily on centralised control. The exchange rate was pegged to sterling; credit volumes and interest rates were typically administratively set, and wage-setting was heavily institutionalised. Tariffs were used actively, in an attempt to protect and foster domestic industry, lift employment and reduce the economy’s reliance on volatile global commodity markets.

    Many great Australian thinkers helped shape this first Golden Age – but today I will focus on just two.

    The first is Lyndhurst Giblin.

    Giblin was a model Accidental Economist. He devoted his first 45 years to everything but the subject: he was part of the Klondike gold rush, served as a Tasmanian MP and received the Military Cross for gallantry on the Western Front. Yet little more than a decade after the First World War, Giblin had developed one of the most important building-blocks of macroeconomics.

    As Government Statistician for Tasmania and later Ritchie Professor of Economics at the University of Melbourne, Giblin had a ringside seat for the Great Depression – which in Australia began in 1928 as commodity prices fell, accelerating in 1929 with the global slump. Giblin saw that sharp declines in world prices for agricultural produce – Australia’s main export – would not only lower Australian farmers’ incomes, but would also cause them to spend less. And that in turn would lower incomes for others, causing a slump to ripple out through the wider economy. That rippling could be far larger than the first-round impact alone, amplifying the domestic repercussions of a global shock.

    Giblin set out this startlingly simple but revolutionary idea – the modern-day multiplier in all but name – in a 1930 lecture. That’s a year before Richard Kahn’s seminal Economic Journal paper, and six years before Keynes’ General Theory. What is today known universally as the ‘Keynesian multiplier’ could and perhaps should be called the ‘Giblin-Keynes multiplier’. Yet neither Kahn nor Keynes made any reference to Giblin’s work, or even appeared aware of its existence.

    Giblin, however, was far less interested in global acclaim than he was in working out how Australia could rescue itself from the Depression – and that was a hotly contested question. The then Premier of New South Wales, Jack Lang, had a simple answer: default on state and Commonwealth debt to the United Kingdom and use the savings to stimulate domestic activity. But default risked destroying Australia’s future borrowing capacity, rendering its economic model unworkable.

    The Bank of England, in the form of the widely disliked Otto Niemeyer, had a different proposal: cut wages and balance the budget. Based partly on his multiplier analysis, Giblin worried that approach would be too deflationary. With Douglas Copland, Leslie Melville and others, he helped prepare the 1931 ‘Premiers Plan’, which argued that Australia should accompany lower wages and a balanced budget with monetary easing to ‘spread the loss’. A sharp devaluation against the British pound, executed the same year, provided further support to external competitiveness. Giblin framed the challenge as tackling an ‘outside problem which is causing an inside problem’ – concepts that years later would be formalised as external and internal balance.

    Although Giblin used what would come to be thought of as a ‘Keynesian’ analytical tool (the multiplier), his policy prescriptions were decidedly un -Keynesian: this was no debt-financed fiscal expansion. Writing in the Melbourne Herald in 1932, Keynes himself recognised the plan ‘saved the economic structure of Australia’. But he advised against its wider use, arguing that competitive devaluation or wage deflation would leave no-one better off, and advocating ‘public works’ rather than ‘further pressure on money wages or a further forcing of exports’.

    Giblin’s thinking evolved in the same direction over time, and by the end of the Second World War he favoured using government spending to stabilise the economy and keep unemployment low. That view informed Australia’s position at the Bretton Woods conference, where it argued that relaxing trade protections – a key goal of the United States – without also committing to full employment could leave countries like Australia badly exposed to external shocks. And it formed the core of the 1945 Full Employment White Paper, developed by Giblin alongside Melville and ‘Nugget’ Coombs – later the first Governor of the RBA – which set the basis for policy in much of the post-war period.

    My second case study is Trevor Swan – regarded by many as Australia’s greatest economist.

    Swan made not one but two key contributions. The first is summarised in the ‘Swan diagram’, and extended in the ‘Salter-Swan’ model developed with fellow Australian Wilfred Salter. The model is designed to help think about policy coordination and trade-offs in a small economy like Australia, with trade and a fixed exchange rate. The model elegantly demonstrated many of the issues the country faced in the first Golden Age trying to achieve both internal and external balance. And it illustrated how different combinations of macroeconomic tools – including fiscal, wage, exchange rate and trade policy – might be used to maintain both in the face of international shocks.

    Swan’s second seminal contribution was aimed at thinking through how to foster longer term economic growth. Swan showed that medium-term growth in real per capita labour income depends on the rate of technical progress, growth in the labour supply, and growth in the capital stock. This was a crucial insight for Australia, which relied heavily on high rates of immigration. Swan’s framework showed that, in such circumstances, sustained growth in real incomes also required rapid growth in productive capital and technical progress. Without that, real incomes would stagnate or fall. Important messages for policymakers at the time – and still relevant today.

    Swan’s personal story is fascinating. Amongst other things, he was a perfectionist, and that – combined with his preference for supporting Australian economics – led him to publish his work slowly (if at all), and exclusively in local journals. As a consequence, much of the credit for his pioneering ideas on growth, including a Nobel prize, went to Robert Solow rather than Swan. But like Giblin, Australia mattered more to him than global fame. Alongside his role as ANU’s first Professor of Economics, Swan was Chief Economist to the Prime Minister’s Department (in the 1950s) and a member of the RBA Board (from 1975–1985).

    The second Golden Age

    The second Golden Age – from ideas to action – straddles either side of the deep economic reforms of the 1980s and 1990s.

    The reforms overturned the paradigm of the first Golden Age. The exchange rate was floated. High tariffs were replaced with much freer trading arrangements. Constraints on the financial sector were released; and, in time, the central bank was made independent and asked to hit an inflation target. Of course, there was good luck too, as huge new export markets opened up in Asia. But taken together, these changes ushered in an extended period of prosperity for Australia.

    The intellectual groundwork for the reforms was laid years earlier, as recognition dawned that frameworks of centralised control and protectionism were undermining, rather than protecting, competitiveness, productivity growth and living standards. This was far from unique to Australia, of course. But Australian thinkers again made important contributions to the evolving global consensus – perhaps most notably on the case against trade protection, through the work of Max Corden. Corden showed that the economic costs of tariffs were much larger than previously recognised, once general equilibrium effects were accounted for. His work, including the concept of ‘net effective rates of protection’, which captured the impact of tariffs on imported inputs as well as outputs, remains widely cited – and, sadly, is highly topical again today.

    Like his earlier compatriots, Corden did not just push forward academic thinking – he also rolled up his sleeves and got stuck into policymaking for Australia. His work had a profound impact on the enquiries led by John Crawford over the 1960s and 1970s calling for a rationalisation of tariffs. And it led, through the advocacy of Fred Gruen, to the Whitlam government’s across-the-board 25 per cent cuts in tariffs in 1973, which began the long and winding road to free trade. The Tariff Board was renamed the Industries Assistance Commission – and two decades later became the Productivity Commission: quite a journey!

    The reforms of the Second Golden Age reflected a dawning recognition that – subject to safeguards – flexible market prices could facilitate adjustment to both internal and external shocks more effectively than administrative controls. These were not uniquely Australian ideas (Ross Garnaut called it ‘the Washington consensus come to Australia’). But strong advocacy by the government and wider public institutions helped them take root. And the overlay of specifically Australian policies – including the 1983–1996 Prices and Incomes Accord – helped maintain social and political support for reform. The strength of such equity considerations, familiar from Giblin’s work in the 1930s, remains an important feature in Australian macroeconomic policy debates to the present day.

    Across both Golden Ages, Australia also had a world-leading role in two areas of practical policymaking: quantitative macro-modelling; and economic data.

    Australia’s first general equilibrium macro-econometric model was developed in the early 1940s by – who else – Trevor Swan! Indeed Swan’s model has a decent claim to be among the first globally, coming after Jan Tinbergen’s 1936 model of the Netherlands but more than a decade before Lawrence Klein and Arthur Goldberger’s model of the United States. Once again, Tinbergen and Klein both received Nobel prizes; Swan (who didn’t even publish his model during his lifetime) did not. From the early 1970s, the Treasury and RBA built a suite of state-of-the-art open economy macro-econometric models. ORANI, one of the most advanced large-scale computable general equilibrium models of the time, was used in the Crawford enquiries. And in the 1990s, Warwick McKibbin and Peter Wilcoxen developed the global hybrid DSGE/CGE model, ‘G-Cubed’, used most recently to provide widely cited assessments of the impact of US tariffs.

    The strength of Australia’s economic data has an even longer pedigree. As the first Government Statistician of New South Wales from 1886, Sir Timothy Coghlan produced a series of yearbooks that set global standards for the measurement of aggregate income and occupational classification in national censuses. Half a century later, Keynes’ disciple Colin Clark helped bring modern national income accounting to Australia. And there have been many other examples of methodological trailblazing since then – including early adoption of survey sampling approaches and an integrated business register; and pioneering use of satellite imaging and integrated data sets. The critical importance of effective data gathering to Australia’s economic success was reflected: in its independent institutional setting at the heart of government; in its job titles – the head economic adviser to government was for some time known as the ‘Chief Statistician’; and in its ability to attract some of Australia’s top minds, from Giblin, Sir Roland Wilson and Charles Wickens right up to today.

    Before I leave this brief stroll through the past, I should acknowledge the key role that the ESA itself played in this history. Many of those I’ve talked about today were presidents of the Society; and many of their ideas appeared in its publications. Like Australian macroeconomics in general, a defining feature of the Society has been its focus on ideas that can be implemented, not just admired. Douglas Copland, ESA’s first President, encouraged members to involve themselves in the practical affairs of government and business – a principle captured in the Society’s aim ‘to encourage the teaching and study of economics and its application to Australia’. The RBA has long been an active supporter of that program. Bernie Fraser held the Presidency of the Society while he was RBA Governor in the early 1990s, hosting central council meetings in the Bank’s boardroom in Martin Place. And two of our current Department Heads played leading roles more recently: Jacqui Dwyer was an executive adviser on economics education; and Penny Smith was President of the NSW branch, supporting the launch of the Society’s Women in Economics Network.

    Will there be a third Golden Age? The worry … and the call to arms

    By any standards, then, the past century has been an extraordinary story – of world-leading thinking, deployed by the country’s best academic minds, working hand-in-hand with policymakers, helping to pull the economy from the jaws of global turmoil and setting it on the path to prosperity.

    So the killer question is this: can Australian macroeconomic thinking do it again, as the world economy is once more in flux?

    Ask that question of the macro research community today, and some seem worried:

    • about Australia’s ability to attract, retain and grow top academic talent;
    • about diminished academic incentives to work on issues of greatest policy relevance to Australia; and
    • about perceptions of a weakened partnership between academia and policymakers.

    Views differ on how serious those worries are. The best Australian research remains world-class. And we don’t need to solve everything ourselves: the scope to draw on global thinking, adopting and adapting it to Australian conditions, is far greater than in Giblin’s day.

    But, where there are concerns, they should be seen as a call to arms, not a cause for despondency. And that’s because the defining macroeconomic challenges of our age – the rolling back of free trade; the implications of shifting geopolitical alliances; climate change; and the need to reinvigorate productivity growth globally – lie right in our areas of comparative advantage.

    The question is how to leverage that advantage. Let me break that into three sub-questions.

    How can we build on Australia’s historical strength in open economy macro?

    The long arc back to a more regionalised, less open, international trading system, coupled with the realities of climate change, poses fundamental questions for Australian macroeconomic research along at least three dimensions:

    • First, how will the composition and geographical location of our export markets change in response to evolving trade policies and geopolitical alliances? What implications will those shifts have for domestic output, investment, labour markets and pricing? And how do we harness our natural and human resources to take advantage of those shifts?
    • Second, how will global commodity demand change over time? How long will markets for ‘traditional’ minerals including coal, gas and iron ore – mainstays of the economic model in Australia today – persist? Will markets for ‘new economy’ minerals and renewable energy sources take their place, and how can Australia best position itself to take advantage of such trends?
    • And, third, how will these and other structural shifts change the sorts of shocks that stabilisation policy, including monetary policy, needs to respond to? How will that influence optimal policy design? And how might we need to adjust our thinking about trade-offs, across the different policy goals and tools available?

    Understanding the macroeconomic risks, and opportunities, from these structural changes is a vital priority for research – to protect the economy, but also to ensure a clear path for future growth. The good news is there is a rich history of Australian macro research and modelling to draw on. The challenge is that this will only take us so far: dealing with tomorrow’s world will require us to apply and extend that research to answer new questions.

    How can we deepen the links between academia and policymakers?

    Second, how can we deepen the links between academia and policymakers – the secret sauce of the first two Golden Ages?

    There are certainly some great examples today. Several Commissioners at the Productivity Commission are current or former academics, including Catherine de Fontenay, ESA’s President. The Treasury’s competition review has an expert advisory panel, including academics. And many of our top universities and think-tanks have groups focused on fostering engagement on macroeconomic policy issues.

    One of the most profound issues of our time is how to reverse the productivity slowdown. This is by no means a uniquely Australian challenge – but the Second Golden Age demonstrated the power of harnessing academic ideas and policy to drive a long-term recovery in productivity. Important work is underway on this topic in the public sector, some of it in conjunction with academia: for example, researchers at the Productivity Commission, Treasury and RBA have analysed the causes of the productivity slowdown, its links to competition, innovation and dynamism, and the implications for the wider economy. And the Commission currently has five separate inquiries underway into potential practical reforms, which among other things will serve as inputs to the Government’s Economic Reform roundtable in August.

    A lot of research in this space makes use of Australia’s excellent microdata. The availability, quality and breadth of Australian de-identified datasets on business and individuals is comparable to anywhere in the world – due in no small part to the excellent work of the Australian Bureau of Statistics, as well as the Australian Tax Office and Department of Social Services. Being at the forefront in this space offers scope for researchers to do globally relevant and frontier work, in an Australian context: the best of both worlds. For example, at the RBA we are currently using it to assess frontier questions around how monetary policy affects labour supply, and how pricing dynamics changed during the recent increase in inflation.

    How can we communicate the urgency of the challenge?

    Third, what can we do as a community to communicate the urgency of the challenge, to show its importance and draw new talent into this vital work? Bringing academics, policy economists and policymakers together can help us reach a common understanding, of both the problems and the potential solutions. In that context, conferences like this one can be extremely powerful, as can the work of the ESA more generally. But it is crucial that both sides – policy and academia – buy in. And we need to focus, as a profession, on how we communicate our thinking. The Golden Ages were full of people like Giblin who specialised in translating big ideas into simple language. As Danielle Wood argued at last year’s APS Economist conference, it has never been more crucial for economists to speak directly and plainly.

    The role of the RBA

    Many of those I spoke with in preparing this speech emphasised the leading role that the RBA could play, as one of the most prominent consumers and producers of Australian macro research; and as a training ground. The RBA has a rich history at the leading edge of central bank research – and we remain engaged across a wide range of issues today. But as I’ve already noted navigating the complex and unpredictable world of tomorrow will pose big new challenges.

    That’s why, spurred on by the findings of the RBA Review, the Bank will be refreshing its research strategy, with a new set of priorities, identifying the big questions that need to be answered to support future policymaking. We’ll use those priorities to hold ourselves to account – but we’ll need external help too. Part of that will involve deeper collaboration on specific research topics, building on the centres of excellence here in Australia. And part of it will involve finding new ways to come together collectively, building on our existing workshops and conferences, and our six-monthly academic advisory panel. Here too there is more than an element of ‘back to the future’ – it was nearly 75 years ago when Coombs, as head of the Commonwealth Bank, the de facto central bank, first conceived of convening senior academics to critique the exercise of policy. As we face into a more complex world, we need that support and challenge more than ever.

    Conclusion

    Let me conclude.

    A 100th birthday is always a cause for celebration.

    For Australian macroeconomics that is true with bells on.

    Two Golden Ages, forged in response to fundamental shifts in the global paradigm – powered by world-class thinking, ruthlessly applied to a single end – improving the lot of the Australian people.

    As the global paradigm shifts again, the challenge is to go for the hat trick.

    The good news is the policy questions facing us, and the world, lie four-square in Australia’s areas of comparative advantage.

    But to exploit that advantage, we need to relearn the lessons of the past – drawing in our best talent, strengthening the incentives for policy-relevant research, and deepening the links between academics and policymakers.

    As a trading economy reliant on world markets, we have no choice but to respond. But we can go one better: by marshalling our best brains we can turn this challenging environment to our advantage.

    At the RBA, we stand ready to play our part in this great endeavour.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Government takes action to deliver neighbourhood health services

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Government takes action to deliver neighbourhood health services

    The government hits the ground running on delivering the 10 Year Health Plan by taking the first steps in the roll-out of new neighbourhood services

    • Ground-breaking neighbourhood health services to be delivered in most deprived areas first where healthy life expectancy is lowest
    • Government hits ground running on delivering 10 Year Health Plan, beginning in deprived communities with greatest need
    • Pioneering neighbourhood health teams will focus on patients with multiple long-term conditions and more complex issues

    People living in the most deprived communities across the country are set to benefit from new neighbourhood health services as the government takes the first steps in the rollout today (Wednesday 9th July), making care more convenient and reducing health inequalities.

    Central to the 10 Year Health Plan, the services will bring NHS care closer to home and provide better support for people with complex conditions, keeping them well and avoiding unnecessary hospital trips.

    One example is Team Up Derbyshire – an initiative which links up GPs, social workers, home carers and nurses to support people who need care in their own homes – bringing the best of the NHS to the rest of the NHS.

    The government has hit the ground running on delivering the plan, today writing to health chiefs and local authority chief executives, urging them to team up with local health and care providers, voluntary groups, and members of their communities to accelerate the rollout of the services across the country.

    They have been asked to submit applications – outlining examples of joined-up working and innovation in their areas – to join phase one of the neighbourhood health programme.

    This will prepare local partnerships to take on responsibility for more neighbourhood services in their area. It will see successful applicants join an intensive national coaching programme over the summer including major workshop days that bring together experts, GPs and their teams, patients, the voluntary sector and local authorities.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting said:

    Our 10 Year Health Plan committed to building a Neighbourhood Health Service, and we’re hitting the ground running on delivering it.

    If we are to get patients cared for faster, on their doorstep and even in their own home, then we need to shift the focus of the NHS from hospitals to the community.

    Today, we are issuing an open invitation to local authorities and health services to become pioneer neighbourhood health services and lead the charge of healthcare reform.

    As part of our Plan for Change, we’re beginning the Neighbourhood Health Service in areas of greatest need first, to tackle the unfair health inequalities that blight our country.

    From September, the first 42 sites will then immediately start rolling out their neighbourhood health programmes, with clear guidance, support and metrics to report on regularly.

    The department and NHS England will work with over 40 places across the country and ensure each region is covered by the programme. The services will be prioritised in working class areas where healthy life expectancy is lowest, targeting communities with the greatest need first. 

    After years of neglect, areas where people need the NHS most often have the fewest GPs, the worst performing services and the longest waits. People in working-class areas and coastal towns spend more of their lives in ill health, and life expectancy among women with the lowest incomes has fallen in recent years, after decades of progress.

    Neighbourhood health services will bring together teams of professionals to focus on patients with multiple long-term conditions and people with complex needs.

    A joint taskforce has been set up between the Department of Health and Social Care and NHS England to drive progress, chaired by Sir John Oldham and made up of NHS leaders, local authority bosses, and other key figures from the voluntary sector and health and care organisations.

    In addition to the neighbourhood health services that will begin in September, the government is also working to deliver neighbourhood health centres across the country over the course of the government’s 10 Year Health Plan to rebuild the NHS.

    Pioneering teams – some based entirely under one roof – will be set up in local communities to dramatically improve access to the health service, and will include staff like nurses, doctors, social care workers, pharmacists, health visitors, palliative care staff, and paramedics. Community health workers and volunteers will also play a pivotal role in these teams.

    Millions of patients will be treated and cared for by teams of health professionals, and in years to come, local neighbourhood health centres will relieve pressure on overstretched hospitals and provide cutting edge, personalised care.

    Eventually these health centres will be open 12 hours a day, 6 days a week within local communities, and will not only bring historically hospital-based services into the community – diagnostics, post-operative care and rehab – but will also offer services like debt advice, employment support and stop smoking or weight management, all of which will help tackle issues which we know affect people’s health.

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    Updates to this page

    Published 9 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    July 9, 2025
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