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Hotels stays increased by over 50% in 27 European cities

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Aerial view of Lisbon
Lisbon: rates as Europe’s best value city in the annual City Costs Barometer

Lisbon has emerged as the best value of 35 cities surveyed for Post Office Travel Money’s 16th annual City Costs Barometer, beating a strong challenge from Eastern European cities Vilnius and Krakow. However, the cost comparison by the UK’s largest provider of holiday money found that the weaker pound and surging hotel prices mean British tourists planning a city holiday will need to choose their destinations carefully or face paying up to 76 per cent more than last year.

At £225, Lisbon’s barometer cost was just two per cent higher than last summer, helping the city reach the top spot for the first time. Two nights in a three-star hotel averaged £121, only 5.2 per cent up on 2022, compared with rises of over 30 per cent in every other city surveyed. At the same time, the cost of 11 other typical city break items (a meal for two, range of drinks, sightseeing and transport) was 1.5 per cent lower than last year. As a result, prices in the Portuguese capital were less than a third of those in Europe’s most expensive cities, Venice (£687) and Amsterdam (£727).

Research into holiday intentions for 2023 reveals that 40 per cent of Britons planning trips abroad will take a city break, while a separate Post Office survey shows that Lisbon is the only top 10 city in the City Costs Barometer to be named among the most popular 10 choices for holidaymakers planning city visits. The other top 10 choices named in this research – Paris, Barcelona, Amsterdam, London, Rome, Edinburgh, Madrid, Dublin and Berlin – are among the most expensive cities in Europe, according to the barometer research.

Britons hoping for a low cost break might be better advised to head to the Baltic Republics, Poland or Greece, whose cities feature in the City Costs Barometer top 10. Lithuania’s capital Vilnius (£226), rated top city by the Post Office in 2019 and 2020, proved a close runner-up to Lisbon – just 25p more expensive for the barometer items. Two other past winners – Krakow (3rd place, £251) and Athens (4th, £262) – complete the top four cities.

The barometer research found that British tourists can also bag a city break bargain by choosing from Riga (5th, £285), Zagreb (7th, £330), Budapest (8th, £331) or Warsaw (9th, £331) in Eastern Europe, or Portugal’s second city Porto (6th £325) and Lille (10th, £332) in Western Europe.

However, barometer prices have increased in all 35 cities surveyed this year, and significant accommodation rate rises are the key factor in inflating the costs faced by British visitors. Two-night hotel stays have increased by over 50 per cent in 27 of the 35 cities – with the biggest rises since summer 2022 in Madrid, up 139 per cent from £161 to £385 – and Berlin, up 121 per cent from £168 to £372.

 “This year’s rise in prices makes it even more important for holidaymakers to do their homework before booking a city break. The increased price of accommodation could add hundreds of pounds to the overall cost of a holiday so travellers need to budget carefully for this. We also advise checking costs for meals, drinks and sightseeing before booking, as these are items that most city break tourists will incur. As this year’s barometer shows, there are wide variations in costs between cities and people who are prepared to swap destination can make their pounds stretch much further by choosing a cheaper capital like Lisbon or Vilnius.”, says Laura Plunkett, Head of Travel Money at Post Office.

By comparison, price rises for meals, drinks, transport and sightseeing are far lower than those for hotel stays. 10 cities – Amsterdam, Barcelona, Copenhagen, Dublin, Dubrovnik, Florence, Madrid, Paris, Riga and Venice – registered rises of 10 per cent or less, while four – Stockholm (-14.7%), Bruges (-4.9 per cent), Krakow (-3.2%) and Lisbon (-1.5%) saw year-on-year falls.

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The Häagen-Dazs Rose Project announces 50 nominees

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Kim Rihal, founder of social enterprise Equal Education, is one of the 50 women shortlisted for The Häagen-Dazs Rose Project
Kim Rihal, founder of social enterprise Equal Education, is one of the 50 women shortlisted for The Häagen-Dazs Rose Project

Earlier this year, on International Women’s Day 2023, Häagen-Dazs launched ‘The Rose Project’, a global initiative with a $100,000 (USD) bursary grant inviting nominations to recognise unsung trailblazing women in honour of the brand’s female co-founder Rose Mattus. Yesterday, 23 November, on what would have been Rose Mattus’ birthday, Häagen-Dazs announced the top 50 #WomenWhoDontHoldBack nominees being shortlisted for their achievements and its five globally accomplished Häagen-Dazs Rose Project judges.

Over 2,500 applications were received for The Häagen-Dazs Rose Project putting forward pioneering efforts and societal contributions made by women across the globe. From these, 50 talented and inspirational women have been shortlisted and will be put forward to win one of five monetary grants of $20,000 (USD), which will be announced on International Women’s Day 2024, to continue their exceptional work, unleash their potential or give to a cause they are passionate about. The top 50 shortlist includes women from 17 countries hailing from across Europe, Asia, Africa & Middle East, Australia and the Americas.

The all-female judging panel from across the world has been handpicked for the final selection stage of The Häagen-Dazs Rose Project includes. UK-based author, broadcaster and philanthropist Katie Piper, fashion entrepreneur and advocate for women’s fertility issues, Velda Tan from Singapore and Spanish entrepreneur and creative director Inés Arroyo, are amongst the judges.

“International Women’s Day 2023 marked the launch of The Häagen-Dazs Rose Project to honour the legacy of our co-founder, Rose Mattus, and create a fund platform to provide opportunities to women across all fields around the world who are truly deserving of support and recognition. We were thrilled to receive thousands of nominations across countries and our #WomenWhoDontHoldBack Top 50 shortlist is a compelling and diverse mosaic of trailblazing female narratives that moved us and serve as an inspiration to women everywhere”, says Aurélie Lory, Häagen-Dazs spokesperson.

To find out more about the story of each entrepreneur shortlisted for The Häagen-Dazs Rose Project, visit: https://iwd.haagen-dazs.global/en/.

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47% of women feel their workplace is not combatting inequality

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Katherine Maher, CEO, Web Summit, on Centre Stage during day one of Web Summit 2023 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon, Portugal
Katherine Maher, CEO, Web Summit, on Centre Stage during day one of Web Summit 2023 | Photo: Eóin Noonan/Web Summit

The proportion of women who feel that their workplace is not taking appropriate measures to combat gender inequality has nearly doubled in a year, a new survey has revealed.

Web Summit, the world’s largest technology event taking place in Lisbon this week, has released its third annual State of Gender Equity in Tech report, which is based on a survey distributed among its women in tech community.

76.1 percent of respondents feel empowered to pursue and/or hold a leadership position; fewer respondents (41.8 %) feel the need to choose between family and career when compared to 2022 (50.4 %); and there is at least one woman in a senior management position in 80.4 percent of respondents’ companies, a similar proportion to last year (81.3%).

The survey found that 70.5 percent of respondents feel pressure to prove their worth compared to male counterparts, while 77.2 percent feel they need to work harder to prove themselves because of their gender.

Over three quarters of respondents (76.1 %) feel empowered to pursue and/or hold a leadership position. And almost half of respondents think that their workplace is not taking appropriate measures to combat gender inequality, increasing from 26 percent in 2022 to 47
percent in 2023.

“While it is encouraging to see progress in some areas, such as those feeling the need to choose between their family and career, there are also some deeply concerning trends within this report. Seeing an increase in those who report having experienced sexism in the workplace in the last year is disheartening in 2023. We hope that this kind of research can breed some positives, and that it will push workplaces – and women within these workplaces – to broach these topics and make progress in these areas,” said Carolyn Quinlan, VP of community at Web Summit.

Last year, 42 percent of attendees at Web Summit were women and 33 percent of speakers were women. In 2023 these numbers have slightly improved with 43 percent of attendees and 38 percent of speakers on stage being women this year.

The women in tech programme at this year’s Web Summit is at capacity, and the women in tech programme at Web Summit Rio 2023 reached capacity in record time.

The WebSummit 2023 is running from November 13th to 16th in Lisbon, Portugal.

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Krispy Kreme to give away free donuts on World Kindness Day

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A box of Krispy Kreme donuts opened and with donuts inside
The company, founded in 1937, is giving away 60,000 free doughnuts around the world today | Photo: Clément Proust

American multinational doughnut company and coffeehouse chain, Krispy Kreme, is celebrating “World Kindness Day” today by distributing free donuts in the US and the UK.

The chain is giving away a box of a dozen glazed donuts for free with no purchase necessary. But only the first 500 guests that visit each participating Krispy Kreme US stores on “World Kindness Day”, Monday November 13th, will be able to get a free box of donuts.

Krispy Kreme often gives away free or discounted donuts to generate buzz on special occasions. The company, founded in 1937, traditionally gives out free donuts to customers on National Donut Day, celebrated on the first Friday of June of each year. And in July, a dozen of glazed donuts were sold for 86 cents to celebrate its 86th birthday.

Thousands of free donuts are also expected to be given away today across Krispy Kreme stores in the United Kingdom, with customers being encouraged to ask for the World Kindness Day offer. No purchase necessary.

The company, which operates in over 30 countries around the world, said it wants the brand associated with World Kindness Day to make “meaningful connections” with customers.

“World Kindness Day is an opportunity to make a positive difference by being generous,” Dave Skena, Krispy Kreme’s global chief brand officer, said in a release. “Simple gestures of caring and thanks, including sharing a sweet treat, is a great way to do that.”

Krispy Kreme said that it’s considering expanding a limited partnership it has with McDonald’s to sell more of its donuts at the latter’s location.

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