correspondentjonathan blake. clu bs clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes as clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes as the - on the strikes as the government does not hope that afterjunior doctors walked out yesterday, they said the 6% rise offered yesterday was not enough. appointments and cancellations again, amounting to the ministers urging unions to the ministers urging unions to say yes to the increases offered, they warned they could be more common. i offered, they warned they could be more common. be more common. i think there will be a be more common. ! think there will be a new be more common. i think there will be a new wave be more common. i think there will be a new wave of be more common. i think there will be a new wave of strikes i will be a new wave of strikes in the nhs and what really needs to happen as the government needs to come to the table, pay a proper pay rise to these workers.
but mark zuckerberg s took off. it s less popular than it used to be with young people, but it says it s still growing. it s the biggest in the world with 2 billion daily users, the most being in india and the us. facebook made the internet political. it was instrumental in movements and has become a key place for campaigning and debating elections around the world, for good and bad. in 2018 facebook agreed with the un report that it said it failed to prevent its platform from being used to incite offline violence. they made personal data global and less personal. they proved collecting our likes and dislikes is extremely lucrative. facebook s company meta takes the lion share of global digital ad money alongside google. but it also proven what can go wrong with all that data collection. facebook has been fined hundreds of millions of dollars, multiple times, for mishandling data. most famously in the cambridge analytical scandal. the kickstart of the dominance of meta. mark
in the united states where the central bank, the us federal reserve, has raised the cost of borrowing for the tenth time. the quarter percent rise puts the fed s main interest rate at between 5 and 5. 25% the highest it s been in 16 years. but has it done enough to tame inflation? or with banks struggling and recession looming, has the fed gone too far? our north america business correspondent samira hussain reports from new york. inflation remained stubbornly high, to try to get the cost of living back down to more normal levels the federal reserve has raised interest rates ten times in a little over a year, now it seems it may be ready to perhaps take a pause. the committee perhaps take a pause. the committee will perhaps take a pause. the committee will take - perhaps take a pause. the committee will take into account the cumulative tightening of monetary policy, le-s tightening of monetary policy, legs with which policy affects economic activity and inflation and ec
frustrating first round. just too many errors. yes, he held his nerve on the final hole but some seven shots behind the leaders, he is already playing catch up. it’s shots behind the leaders, he is already playing catch up. it s not disastrous already playing catch up. it s not disastrous but already playing catch up. it s not disastrous but i already playing catch up. it s not disastrous but i just already playing catch up. it s not disastrous but ijust need - already playing catch up. it s not disastrous but ijust need to - already playing catch up. it s not disastrous but ijust need to tidyj disastrous but ijust need to tidy it all up. i didn t feel like i was too far away today, i made five birdies but a couple too many mistakes on the card. rm? birdies but a couple too many mistakes on the card. rory mcilory has a lot of mistakes on the card. rory mcilory has a lot of work mistakes on the card. rory mcilory has a lot of work to mistakes on the card. rory m
a top republican has accused us regulators of being asleep at the wheel in the period leading up to the implosion of silicon valley bank. those comments in the first of two bruising congressional hearings intended to shed light on the failings that led to the lender s collapse. in response, the regulator pointed the finger at executives saying they did a terrible job of managing risk. we are still reconstructing the supervisory racket, we understand they were issued a matter requiring attention based on the inaccuracy of their interest rate risk modelling. essentially, the risk model was not at all aligned with reality. today, the hearing continues. the collapse of svb and signature bank created shock waves across the global banking sector, with central bankers moving to reassure nations that the structural integrity of the financial system remains intact. joining me now is greg feldberg, director of research for the yale program on financial stability. you were director