Was the Governor flip-flopping on interest rates?
Mark Carney is saying that in order to stop inflation overshooting the target, we might have to start raising rates more quickly or more steeply than yesterday’s report would imply.
2,290 items found
A massive explosion erupts in the Chinese city of Tianjin and there are reports that many have been hospitalised.
Mark Carney is saying that in order to stop inflation overshooting the target, we might have to start raising rates more quickly or more steeply than yesterday’s report would imply.
A City trader has been jailed for 14 years for rigging Libor rates in a bid to boost his own seven-figure earnings.
Australian officials say they are “more and more confident” that parts of an aircraft wing found washed up on Reunion Island are from the missing Malaysian Airlines jet.
A leaked UN document raises concerns over the prospects for genuine justice for the Sri Lankan victims of alleged war crimes, writes Callum Macrae.
House of Commons Speaker John Bercow has been accused of “obscene waste” after billing £172 to be chauffeur-driven to a conference just 0.7 miles away from parliament.
Female genital mutilation could affect women in every part of England and Wales, according to a new study. What’s behind the numbers?
The levels of economic pain and dysfunctional borrowing set to be inflicted on Greece mean that at some point public opinion will flip.
Parliament votes in favour of painful reforms put forward by Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, but will it be enough to secure a bailout from European powers?
As British singer Rita Ora is made an honorary ambassador for Kosovo 23 years after leaving the country, Krishnan Guru-Murthy talks to her about identity, refuge and the politics of home.
One year on Channel 4 News returns to Gaza on the anniversary of the conflict with Israel, in the devastated territory as children scavenge in the ruins of a mosque destroyed in the bombardment.
If Angela Merkel has her way, the euphoria in Athens about Sunday’s referendum result will prove short lived. There is a discernible hardening of attitudes in Berlin.
A year-long investigation by the government’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) finds that millions of customers in the UK are spending more than they need to on energy bills.
Berlin had calculated that the Greek people would come to their senses and vote yes. The opposite happened – and Chancellor Merkel must now untangle a Gordian knot of a problem.
The no vote in Greece may be causing political shock and awe but stock markets in Europe reacted with relative calm this morning. The same, however, can’t be said for what has been happening in China.