bryan. bryan: molly, the city of los angeles has spent billions of dollars on its homelessness crisis. it still keeps growing. 10% from last year. coinciding from the housing cost, growing income disparity and an explosion in the fentanyl pandemic. christina coleman is live in los angeles. a lot to say on the situation on the ground there. christina. that is right. very frustrated. billions of dollars have been thrown at this problem. it just keeps getting worse. new numbers from the los angeles homeless services authority say there is a 9% rise over homelessness on any given night in l.a. county. an estimated 75,000 people and the city of l.a. a 10% increase in homelessness and an estimated 36,000 people. i spoke with residents in a west l.a. neighborhood. they told me they now take steps
The Covid-19 pandemic raised awareness that the average American worker lacks a "cash cushion" for emergencies. Some employers are working to change that.
Most political parties are focusing their campaigns on subsidies and tax exemptions populist pledges economists fear will derail Thailand's fiscal balance.
“I’m doing everything I can to deal with the income disparity out there,” Lamont said, including not only his income tax cut but investments that make job training and day care available for those in need.