The Guardian5 June 2026Music, live performance and creative exports
City of Edinburgh: musicians face lower EU work and tour earnings after Brexit
In City of Edinburgh, music venues, promoters and independent performers are exposed to the same post-Brexit touring barriers described in Guardian reporting on UK musicians. The report found that more than a quarter of UK musicians had lost all EU work since 2021, nearly half had seen EU opportunities reduced, average tour earnings had fallen by 45%, and 59% said European touring was no longer viable. For a city or regional music economy, the mechanism is a loss of exportable live-work opportunities, fewer inbound and outbound tours, weaker collaboration and lower income for small artists and venues that depended on frictionless EU mobility.
The Guardian1 June 2026Creative industries / actors / performing arts exports
Edinburgh festivals creative workers face fewer EU jobs after Brexit
In Edinburgh festivals and performing arts, creative workers are exposed to post-Brexit restrictions on EU work, auditions and touring. Guardian reporting described UK actors being shut out of EU jobs by visa rules, taxes, social-security deductions and documentation costs, and reported that performing-arts exports to the EU fell from £1.1bn in 2016 to £929m in 2023. For local theatres, screen firms, agencies and freelance performers, the impact is a loss of reachable labour-market opportunity: entry-level EU contracts, cruise-ship work and theatre tours became harder or uneconomic, especially for less wealthy performers.
The Guardian31 May 2026Regional productivity, investment and labour-market performance
City of Edinburgh: Brexit linked to weaker GDP, investment, employment and productivity
In City of Edinburgh, the regional-prior layer treats productivity as a key route from Brexit exposure to living standards. Guardian reporting summarised research suggesting that UK GDP per head, investment, employment and productivity are lower than under a remain scenario, with business investment frozen by uncertainty and trade frictions. For local economies, this source family is best used as macro context: it helps interpret why regions with high trade exposure, high-value services or capital-intensive industries may show weaker output per worker after Brexit.
The Guardian12 February 2026Chemicals / industrial investment
Grangemouth chemicals site relies on state support amid European industrial pressure
Grangemouth’s chemical infrastructure appeared again in Guardian reporting on Ineos lobbying for government support. The article said the group had received or sought major UK and EU-backed support while facing high energy costs, carbon costs and weak trade defences. For Falkirk, the impact is a regional industrial resilience issue: when a large petrochemical employer becomes dependent on support to sustain investment and employment, the local economy becomes sensitive to policy decisions about energy, regulation, carbon costs and trade protection after Brexit.
The Guardian21 December 2025Carbon-intensive manufacturing / CBAM-exposed exports
Falkirk: Carbon-intensive manufacturing / CBAM-exposed exports Brexit exposure
Falkirk has manufacturing, steel, aluminium, cement, fertiliser, car-parts or energy-intensive production exposure. Guardian reporting said UK exporters faced Brexit-style CBAM paperwork on around £7bn of exports to the EU, including steel, aluminium, washing machines, car parts, cement, fertiliser and energy. For exporters in Falkirk, the channel is a new compliance burden layered on top of customs: firms must document carbon intensity through the production chain, adding administrative costs and contract risk in price-sensitive industrial markets.
The Guardian17 December 2025Chemicals / industrial infrastructure
Government intervention protects Grangemouth ethylene plant jobs
In Grangemouth, Guardian live reporting described a government-backed support package for Ineos’s ethylene plant, expected to protect more than 500 jobs and preserve a component of UK chemicals infrastructure. The reported deal included a grant, loan guarantee and Ineos investment. For Falkirk, this turns industrial policy into a local economic story: the viability of a chemicals site affects skilled employment, suppliers, logistics and downstream manufacturers that depend on polymers and chemical inputs.
MusicRadar4 December 2025Music and cultural touring
City of Edinburgh: Music and cultural touring Brexit evidence
In Edinburgh and other festival-city creative economies, post-Brexit mobility barriers matter because artists, technical crews and performers rely on repeated cross-border work. MusicRadar reported that Dame Evelyn Glennie, Jools Holland and Mark King joined a Cultural Exchange Coalition seeking to remove UK-EU touring barriers. The impact for local artists and venues is that cultural exports depend on visas, carnets, transport rules and simplified touring arrangements; without those, smaller acts face higher costs and fewer opportunities to use European circuits as part of their career path.
The Guardian21 November 2025Health services and skilled labour availability
City of Edinburgh: health systems face loss of overseas-trained staff
In City of Edinburgh, health-service labour availability matters for local productivity because untreated ill-health and staffing shortages feed back into workforce participation. Guardian reporting said 4,880 overseas-trained doctors left the UK in 2024, a 26% rise, while 42% of the UK medical workforce had qualified abroad. For regional health economies, the issue is that a less welcoming post-Brexit labour environment can reduce retention of skilled staff, worsening waiting times and constraining local labour-market participation.
The Guardian31 October 2025Financial services productivity and investment
City of Edinburgh: finance-sector productivity weakened after Brexit
In City of Edinburgh, the productivity channel matters because the local economy either depends directly on high-productivity services or on demand generated by them. Guardian reporting linked weaker UK productivity forecasts to Brexit, noting finance-sector weakness, loss of market share and reduced investment after the UK left the EU. For regional centres with financial, professional or advanced-service employment, the impact is not only jobs lost but slower output per worker growth and a weaker local tax and spending base.
Reuters1 June 2025petrochemicals and refining
Falkirk: petrochemicals and refining exposed to post-Brexit goods-trade frictions
In Falkirk (Falkirk / Grangemouth), petrochemicals and refining face a Brexit-linked physical-goods trade problem. Reuters reported Make UK warning that UK industrial energy prices are exceptionally high, with manufacturing already hit by Brexit, energy costs and global trade tensions; Nissan said its Sunderland plant had the highest energy costs of its global sites. The local exposure is through energy-intensive production: Brexit-related trade friction sits alongside industrial energy costs, so manufacturers face a compound competitiveness problem when bidding for export contracts or attracting new investment.
The Guardian21 March 2025Health and social care labour supply
City of Edinburgh: NHS shifts recruitment away from EU toward red-list countries
In City of Edinburgh, health and care services face a changed post-Brexit labour market. Guardian reporting described the NHS becoming more dependent on staff from WHO red-list countries after the UK left the EU single market, with 65,610 clinicians and support staff from those countries employed in England and 32,935 joining since the start of 2021. For local economies, this shows how Brexit did not eliminate migration needs; it changed recruitment geography, raising ethical and retention concerns while keeping health services dependent on international labour.
The Guardian18 February 2025Architecture, construction services and professional labour
City of Edinburgh: architecture firms face post-Brexit recruitment constraints
In City of Edinburgh, architecture and construction-services firms are exposed to the professional-labour constraint described by Guardian reporting on post-Brexit visa salary rules. The article reported that architecture was removed from the shortage occupation list and the salary threshold rose from just over £26,000 to £45,900, making it harder to retain international graduates and staff projects. For urban economies, this links Brexit to housing delivery, project delays and the productivity of design-led construction services.
The Guardian15 February 2025Chemicals / petrochemicals
Grangemouth chemicals exposure reflects wider industrial cost pressures
In Grangemouth, the Ineos petrochemicals complex is part of a chemicals sector facing high energy costs, weak demand and a difficult regulatory environment. Guardian reporting described Ineos’s financial pressures and noted job-loss threats in Scotland, where the refining arm of Grangemouth was due to close. For Falkirk’s regional economy, the Brexit-relevant channel is industrial competitiveness and investment: chemical production depends on energy, regulation, trade defences and access to supply chains, and pressure on a large anchor site can affect contractors, logistics firms and skilled industrial employment.
The Times3 February 2025Music, theatre and touring artists
City of Edinburgh: Music, theatre and touring artists
In Edinburgh’s festival and classical-music ecosystem, The Times described how post-Brexit bureaucracy has made European performance work more expensive and less accessible for UK musicians and artists. The article reported that opera houses and orchestras in Paris, Vienna, Berlin and Milan can avoid booking UK performers because the paperwork and costs are too burdensome. The local impact is a cultural-export barrier: musicians and performers based in Edinburgh face fewer opportunities, higher admin costs and weaker routes into continental work, especially outside the highest-profile institutions.
British Chambers of Commerce30 January 2025Exporters
East Lothian and Midlothian: Brexit impact on Exporters
In East Lothian and Midlothian, exporters faced a weak growth payoff from the post-Brexit trading settlement. The British Chambers of Commerce reported in January 2025 that 41% of exporters disagreed that the Brexit deal was helping them grow sales, while only 14% agreed. The impact was felt through sales pipelines and confidence: firms trying to sell into EU markets faced paperwork, checks and rules that made growth harder, leaving local exporters with higher transaction costs and fewer easy routes to expand beyond the domestic market.
The Times13 January 2025Chemicals / synthetic ethanol / energy-intensive manufacturing
Falkirk: Chemicals / synthetic ethanol / energy-intensive manufacturing Brexit/data/regulatory exposure
In Falkirk and Grangemouth, The Times reported Ineos’s closure of the UK’s last synthetic ethanol plant at Grangemouth, with a net loss of 80 direct jobs and effects on more than 500 indirect roles. The story was framed around high energy costs and carbon policy, but it also fits the wider post-Brexit chemicals story: a smaller, more separated UK industrial-regulatory market is less attractive for energy-intensive chemicals production serving pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and disinfectants. The local consequence is industrial capacity loss: once a chemical plant closes, specialist jobs, suppliers, logistics and process know-how are hard to rebuild.
Reuters16 October 2024Financial services, insurance and data analysis
City of Edinburgh: financial services lose jobs and EU-facing activity after Brexit
In City of Edinburgh, finance and business-service clusters are affected by the post-Brexit relocation and market-access dynamics described by Reuters. The City of London’s Lord Mayor said Brexit had cost about 40,000 finance jobs, with activity absorbed by Dublin, Milan, Paris and Amsterdam, while financial output had weakened relative to other European economies. For regional financial centres, the mechanism is a loss of EU-facing mandates, fewer high-productivity jobs and lower tax/productivity spillovers from financial services.
Reuters14 August 2024Engineering services and professional qualification recognition
City of Edinburgh: engineers seek non-EU recognition routes after Brexit
In City of Edinburgh, engineering and technical-service firms are affected by post-Brexit professional-recognition frictions and by the search for alternative routes to market access. Reuters reported that UK and US engineering bodies reached a mutual-recognition agreement to make it easier for engineers to have qualifications recognised and provide cross-border services. For local engineering clusters, the relevance is that leaving the EU made recognition of professional services a live trade issue: firms need recognised credentials, mobile staff and trusted standards to sell services internationally.
The Times9 August 2024Construction, manufacturing, accommodation and food labour supply
Falkirk: Scottish businesses report staff shortages in labour-intensive sectors
In Falkirk, labour availability is a key channel through which Brexit interacts with productivity and output. Times reporting on Scottish businesses described acute recruitment problems in construction, manufacturing and accommodation and food, with 31.2% of Scottish respondents reporting staff shortages and many saying vacancies had become harder to fill. For local firms, shortages reduce capacity, delay projects, raise wage pressure and make it harder to convert demand into output.
The Guardian25 May 2024Tourism, visitor attractions and hospitality labour
City of Edinburgh: tourism attractions face staff shortages after Brexit
In City of Edinburgh, tourism and visitor-economy businesses are exposed to the same labour-market constraint described in Guardian reporting on royal residences and wider attractions. The article reported that tourism employers struggled to recruit front-of-house, retail and catering staff after Brexit and the pandemic, with UKHospitality estimating 132,000 vacancies and an 11% vacancy rate in the sector. For local tourism economies, the impact is reduced opening capacity, higher wage pressure, shorter seasons and weaker export earnings from visitors.
The Guardian14 April 2024Restaurants, hospitality and EU labour supply
City of Edinburgh: restaurants face loss of EU staff and higher visa thresholds
In City of Edinburgh, hospitality businesses face the kind of labour-market pressure described in Guardian reporting on Italian restaurants after Brexit. The article described how salary thresholds and post-Brexit visa rules made it much harder to recruit and retain EU chefs and waiting staff, with employers warning that authenticity, service quality and business viability were affected. For a local restaurant economy, labour availability becomes a production constraint: fewer experienced workers mean reduced opening hours, higher wages, thinner margins and sometimes exit risk for independent firms.
Salmon Scotland28 March 2024Salmon / seafood
East Lothian and Midlothian: Brexit impact on Salmon / seafood
In East Lothian and Midlothian, seafood and food exporters faced post-Brexit losses through additional red tape, certification and border friction. Salmon Scotland estimated in March 2024 that Brexit had cost Scottish salmon up to £100m a year in lost exports. The impact was a reduction in the value that producers could capture from strong European demand: more paperwork, higher costs and slower movements made perishable exports less competitive, affecting processors, hauliers, ports and rural supply chains linked to the salmon industry.
Vogue1 February 2021Fashion, textiles and retail logistics
City of Edinburgh: Fashion, textiles and retail logistics Brexit exposure
City of Edinburgh has textile, fashion, retail or e-commerce exposure that can be hit by rules-of-origin and customs frictions. Vogue reporting described luxury brands and small fashion firms facing delivery delays, duties, returns problems and complicated origin rules after Brexit. For firms in City of Edinburgh, the impact is a fragmentation of what used to be a simple UK-EU retail and wholesale market: returns, stock movements and customer deliveries require more paperwork, while small brands have less capacity to split supply chains between the UK and EU.
ITV News Border12 January 2021Seafood
East Lothian and Midlothian: Brexit impact on Seafood
In East Lothian and Midlothian, seafood businesses faced severe disruption from post-Brexit export paperwork. ITV News Border reported that DR Collin in Eyemouth, described as the town’s biggest employer with around 200 workers, said the business was more or less finished by Brexit because fresh shellfish exports could not move normally through the new system. The impact combined market-access loss with local employment risk: when a perishable exporter cannot reliably reach EU buyers, processing work, transport activity and coastal incomes are all exposed.
Reuters8 January 2021Seafood
East Lothian and Midlothian: Brexit impact on Seafood
In East Lothian and Midlothian, seafood exporters faced immediate post-Brexit border disruption. Reuters reported in January 2021 that Scottish fishermen and seafood exporters halted exports because new paperwork, customs declarations and health certificates created delays for highly perishable products. The impact was not an abstract administrative burden: fresh fish and shellfish lost value when consignments missed delivery windows, exporters faced cancelled orders, and processors had to decide whether shipments were worth risking under the new border regime.