and the rate of core inflation which strips out volatile items like food and fuel is actually going up. rising interest rates are piling the pressure on millions of mortgage borrowers here in the uk who are facing steep rises in monthly bills. the bbc has been hearing from some of them. rebecca from greater manchester, craig in cambridgeshire, and rose who lives in hampshire. just three homeowners out of hundreds of thousands of people facing a huge rise in their mortgage costs over the coming months. at this moment in time, at the end ofjune, i will make my final payment of £434 when my current deal ends, and thereafter i have been told to expect my payments will be over £1,800. i m currently paying £560 a month. at the end ofjuly, it will go on to variable and it will go up to £1,200 a month. 0ur mortgage has gone up by over £2,200 a year. - it s a huge impact on our- expenditure and has an impact on the family as a whole. rose has already been cutting costs on
which strips out volatile items like food and fuel is actually going up! rising interest rates are piling the pressure on millions of mortgage borrowers here in the uk who are facing steep rises in monthly bills. lets hear from some of them. at this moment in time, at the end ofjune, i will make my final payment of £434 when my current deal ends. and thereafter i have been told to expect my payments will be over £1,800. i m currently paying £560 a month. at the end ofjuly, it will go onto variable, and it will go up to £1,200 a month. 0ur mortgage has gone up by over £2,200 a year. - it s a huge impact . on our expenditure, and it has a huge impacti on the family as a whole. the government s finance chief chancellor of the exchequerjeremy hunt says bailing out struggling borrowers only risks stoking inflation further no matter what the pressure from left, right or centre, we won t be pushed off course. because if we re going to help families, if we re going to re
america. his promise to create a national health system help him come close to winning the democratic nomination for president in 2016. so his decision to investigate the working conditions and one of america s biggest employers issuer to capture headlines and set up a robust argument about worker protections. for its part amazon has been criticised for the conditions is warehouse workers face in facilities all over the world. it s already being examined for its safety record by multiple us government agencies. amazon is also notorious for resisting all efforts to unionis? its workforce. now in response to mr sanders letter amazon strongly disagrees photo it says it has been able to reduce injuries across the us operation and has invested more than $1 billion into safety initiatives over the last four years. initiatives over the last four ears. ~ . ., years. meanwhile, indian prime minister narendra years. meanwhile, indian prime minister narendra modi - years. meanwhile, i
i think there are two things here. the first is that you have seen, you know, a very strong embrace by the boeing company and by industry on transparency, and the way that we address things like non conformance in the manufacturing process. and so every non conformance we re talking about, we re talking about with our suppliers who are in the middle of them, we re talking about with customers who are affected by deliveries, we re talking about with the regulator, as we all are striving for that very first principle safety first. that embrace of transparency just means we re having this conversation more out in public as opposed to inside the walls of industry. but let s look to the future a little bit. you and airbus you re now talking about a next generation of planes. in your case, it s a plane with a super long wing that has to have special bracing. what s the end game with that? what are you trying to achieve with that? you know, so in our strategic conversation at the company
and the 737 programmes. well, the 787 programme has been hamstrung for years now by quality control problems. some of those seem to have affected the 737 max programme, as well. with all of this coming together and lasting so long, does that suggest there s some kind of fundamental issue, either with boeing or its suppliers? oh, i don t think so, theo. i think there are two things here. the first is that you have seen, you know, a very strong embrace by the boeing company and by industry on transparency, and the way that we address things like non conformance in the manufacturing process. and so every non conformance we re talking about, we re talking about with our suppliers who are in the middle of them, we re talking about with customers who are affected by deliveries, we re talking about with the regulator, as we all are striving for that very first principle safety first. that embrace of transparencyjust means we re having this conversation more out in public as opposed to insid