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BBC News at Six

of £3.5 trillion — that's $4.3 trillion — a huge amount of money! but dig a bit deeper into the figures and you find something really interesting is happening. here's the economic costs of these disasters. you can see it's been rising steeply since 1970. that's what you'd expect. the wmo says we're seeing five times as many now as we did 50 years ago. at the same time, the economy has grown so there is more value for those events to hit. but now look at the toll of human casualties. it has been falling almost as steeply as the economic costs have been rising. the reason for that, says the wmo, is that the world has got far better at warning people when these events are coming and managing the effects when they hit. take cyclone mocha, the ferocious storm that hit parts of the coast of bangladesh and myanmar last week. 800,000 people needed emergency food

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BBC News at Six

extreme weather has caused trillions of dollars of economic damage in the last half century, according to a report by the world meteorological 0rganisation. but better early warning systems and disaster management mean the number of people dying because of extreme climate conditions has fallen dramatically. 0ur climate editorjustin rowlatt has been looking at the detail. justin. floods, storms and wildfires have taken a terrible toll over the last 50 years, the un“s weather and climate body, the world meteorological 0rganisaton, says. look at this. there have been almost 12,000 climate and weather—related disasters between 1970 and 2021. they've killed more than two million people over that period and have inflicted economic damage costing a total of £3.5 trilion — that's $4.3 trillion —

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The Daily Global

the un's weather and climate body, the world meteorological organisation, says, look at this. there have been almost 12,000 weather related disasters between 1970 and 2021. there's the figure there, 11,778. they have killed — look at this — more than 2 million people over that period and have inflicted economic damage, costing a total of three and a half trillion pounds. that is $4.3 trillion, a huge amount of money. but dig a bit deeper into the figures and you find something really interesting is happening. here's the economic costs of those disasters. and look, the cost is rising really quite dramatically now. that is what you'd expect. the wmo says climate change means we are seeing five times as many extreme weather events as we did 50 years ago and at the same time the economy has grown, so there's more value for those events to hit. but now have a look at the toll of human casualties. it has been falling. look at that, almost as steeply as the economic costs have been rising.

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World Business Report

away from london and heading to new york. they are far from alone. plumbing giant ferguson left the ftse 100 last year and moved to wall street, and gambling group flutter also says it's considering doing the same. the size of the london stock market has been shrinking in recent years. at its peak in 2007 the value of shares listed in london was $4.3 trillion, has fallen to $3 trillion as of this year. and that means london is no longer europe's largest stock market, it lost that title to paris last year. in february the boss of the lloyds of london insurance market expressed his concerns about the city's status to our business editor simonjack. i think we had huge credibility around stability and certainty and i think what we need to do through 23 and 2a is begin to rebuild that stability and that sense of the financial services and the uk as a financial

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Katy Tur Reports

4.3 trillion. 1.4 trillion. >> a lot of cash. >> yes. >> a lot of cash. >> but that surprised me. and you hear though, from trump republicans, who they want the energy economy to be independent. and they would be supportive of that kind of spending and that got a lot of money for nuclear energy and frankly that's something that is supported by plenty of republicans. >> do we still have mike memoli. we still do not have mike. elise, when you look at the state of affairs, what is your sense, i know the polling shows the republicans are on the generic ballot and you have spoken to folks, what is your sense of where things are going? >> it is close but i think republicans have a bit of an advantage, just given the state of the economy, that everyone is paying more for food, and that's something that hits you every single time you try to feed your family, feed yourself. >> talk about democracy being at stake. we talk about pocketbook issues

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Morning Joe-20211122-12:38:00

democrats are by no means, a lot of it was in donald trump's tax cut in 2017 but what you do is you basically create a program and you say it's going to expire in a year or two years and of course once the program is expired, they get renewed and the cost gets added back in. what i listed is the child tax care credits and expanding affordable care act in 2025 and so forth. they would have substantial costs totaling $2. trillion above the cost of legislation. if all these programs were extended and washington programs rarely dies, they get extended, you are looking at $4.3 trillion of total cost of this bill relative to the $2.4 trillion

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America Reports With John Roberts Sandra Smith-20211029-18:06:00

baselines, follow me, i don't want to get to in the weeds >> benjamin: it's friday now. >> seriously though, they sometimes will put in what they call a policy baseline on top of what congress is asking them to score, their judgment about what the longer effects will be from various programs, it is a judgment call and quite useful, you will see that, they mention for trillion and i think that's a reasonable number. the original idea that house budget committee mark was 4.3 trillion, but if you scored a properly as my own mcginnis and some of the outside budget groups, it's about 5.5 trillion, because of this gimmick, this clever, but not really clever, shortening of the time frame. so they sunset it. but the idea is wink link, nod

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Fox Report With Jon Scott-20211016-22:10:00

republican support. >> look at this. it is not even 3 1/2 trillion dollars. the bill that passed out of the house budget committee just two weeks ago is actually 4.3 trillion dollars in spending. it's the largest spending bill in the history of the united states to ever be before congress. it is also the largest tax increase in the history of congress, with 2.1 trillion dollars worth of taxes. it adds 2.4 trillion dollars to the national debt. it's an atrocious bill. it only makes every crises that our country is facing even worse, whether it's the border crisis, whether it's the inflation crisis, whether it's the energy crisis. this bill alone will create amnesty to 10 million illegals. >> you mentioned inflation, and i want to point up some figures. just in the last year, they are fairly astounding, gas is up

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Fox Report With Jon Scott-20211016-22:11:00

43.3% from september 2020 to 21. car rentals up 43%. lodging is up almost 20%. the cost of steak up more than 19%. that's just in one year. we've got -- well, more than three years of the biden administration to go, and so far these numbers don't show any sign of relenting. >> you know, after the 2 trillion dollars reckless biden bailout bill that was passed in march, we're seeing inflation fuel the fire. it's absolutely awful. the price of gas in my home state is up 80% since january 20th. the cost to put food on the table, clothes on your backs or gas in your car is higher because of inflation. cbo projects will hit inflation the highest it has hit since 1981, since jimmy carter policies. but guess what? if we pass this 4.3 trillion dollars wasteful spending bill, you talk about it adding fuel to

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The ReidOut-20211012-23:30:00

good and don't care what every single person that was beaten up and died before us to preserve and expand the rights in the constitution. if we don't fight like they fought and walk across a bridge in alabama and get beaten. rise up. have passion about this and make this not a fight whether it's $2.3 trillion or $4.3 trillion. it's a fundamental fight about the average person. can they live a life they want and grow into that life and can their children and grandchildren survive in this country? >> yeah. >> that's what this is about. >> you and i are on the same page. last question to you, how should we be talking to, let's say, young women who see this fight in texas as something distant from them because they don't plan on getting pregnant. they're not pregnant. they don't live in texas. how do we communicate what matthew talked about in a way that's passionate, not with he is -- hysterics but how do you

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