care workers out of theirjobs. it s the late, late show at old trafford, as an injury time winner earns manchester united victory in the europa league, which keeps alive their chances of winning their group. we are live at king s cross station in london. say happy birthday to the world s most famous train, the flying scotsman, celebrating 100 years on our ways. and as we steam towards the weekend, expect a mishmash of cloud, sunshine and rain at times. sunday looking driver many. coming up. good morning. it s friday, the 14th october. our main story. the chancellor kwasi kwarteng has cut short his visit to the us to hold urgent talks with the prime minister, as pressure mounts on the government over its mini budget. liz truss is facing intense pressure to reverse her tax cutting plans, in a bid to reassure both the financial markets and her own party. frances read reports. behind closed doors in downing street, everything is back on the table. billions of pounds of borrowing
rather than being spent on public services, get swallowed up just in servicing debt. so this is an interest rate shock and it matters for the economy. so all of this really do us affects how much money the government can reasonably afford to spend on things like schools and hospitals, rather than paying money towards its debt. it is enormously complicated, but it really does affect us all. really does affect us all. thank ou, and really does affect us all. thank you. and we really does affect us all. thank you, and we wait really does affect us all. thank you, and we wait to really does affect us all. thank you, and we wait to hear i really does affect us all. thank you, and we wait to hear what | you, and we wait to hear what happens when the chancellor returns. we expect that to be mid morning, don t we? we expect that to be mid-morning, don t we? , ., , ., don t we? yes, later this morning. we know there don t we? yes, later this morning. we know there will don t we? yes,
Like many people in crisis-hit Lebanon, Elias Skaff used to wait for hours to withdraw cash at the bank but now prefers money transfer companies as trust in
BEIRUT: Like many people in crisis-hit Lebanon, Elias Skaff used to wait for hours to withdraw cash at the bank but now prefers money transfer companies as trust in lenders has evaporated. Anyone who relies on traditional banks to receive their money “will die 100 times before cashing it,” said Skaff, 50, who has survived Lebanon’s three-year-old economic downturn with the
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