i still have my student hone debt that i m paying off, and, you know, there is that sense of e, oh, i did it, but how old are we now? as of 2022, 40.5 million americans had student loans, and about 1 in 4 of those, 9.9 million borrowers, it s between 20- 40 grand. so tuition inflation, 4.63% annual increase from 2010 to 020. that s a lot. you re looking at i have an infant, a 9-month-old, you re looking at the 529s, you re already thinking down the road when my child wants to go to college, i don t want to say no, and you re planning for things in the future. it is so much stress and anxiety. i love the approach, we have to go to the root cause, the last bill in the package that s putting the pressure on the grad schools to bring the costs down. and more and more today you re seeing kids that that aren t going to college, you know? they re going out on their own,
revenue a year. these are high stakes, markets are high sta kes, markets are looking high stakes, markets are looking closely, and this kind of own goal from google looking closely, and this kind of own goalfrom google is exactly what they didn t want. james clayton, there are. there. let s go to asia, now, where we are expecting results from the world s top carmaker toyota and its rival nissan. toyota wears the crown in the global car industry in terms of numbers it sold $10.5 million vehicles last year butjust a fraction of those some 25,000 were fully electric. and there are worries the company is falling behind in the transition to zero emission cars. let s talk to giacomo rossi, who looks at transport for the consultants frost and sullivan in milan, italy. a warm welcome to you. toyota s numbers are just out and, you know, it did pose a surprise, a 22% rise in third quarter operating profits. good news, but there is concern about its
come out but it is a step in the right direction. i come out but it is a step in the right direction. come out but it is a step in the right direction. i was going to ask ou about right direction. i was going to ask you about that. right direction. i was going to ask you about that. i right direction. i was going to ask you about that. i know right direction. i was going to ask you about that. i know you i right direction. i was going to ask| you about that. i know you cannot give more detail but do you have a wider sense of how the scheme is going to work? mr; wider sense of how the scheme is going to work? wider sense of how the scheme is going to work? my understanding is that from april going to work? my understanding is that from april next going to work? my understanding is that from april next year going to work? my understanding is that from april next year people i that from april next year people will be able to apply for additional compensation and this is for a
of people, 555, who took the post office to court in september 2018 with the rulings coming down in march of 2019, they received £50.5 million in compensation but a significant part of that conversation was taken up in legal fees. as a result they never really got the compensation they fully deserved. what this scheme, from what we can initially see, it looks as if it will enable them to get more compensation certainly so they cover some of the consequential losses they have incurred over the years. can money ever really compensate for what these people have been through? very good question. not an easy answer to give. at the end of the day what we have to understand is exactly what they went through. we have been running our post office here in west linton for the last 27 years and we are very much involved in the community.
and i think it sends a message to all companies who find themselves operating in conflict zones that if you if you pay to play with the devil, there could be some serious consequences down the road from the united states. one thing that the justice department is laying out in this announcement is just how much money was involved here in that period of time. let me read a little bit that we found here. it said the gains to all participants in the conspiracy including la farg, their syrian subsidiary and the terrorist groups totaled approximately $80.5 million and in our scratch math it looks like it is about it is about $9 million went directly to isis and another terror group. what does that kind of money mean for groups like isis? like what they were enabling. yeah, so you know, terrorist groups don t have typical revenue streams. they fund their activities,