in april, i announced the united states will double our public international financing to help developing nations tackle thenc climate crisis, and today i m proud to announce that we will work with congress to double that number again. together with increased private capital and from other donors we will be able to meet the goal of mobilizing $100 billion to support climate action in developing nations.il climate action? you can be positive it s going to meet democratic donors raise. is the american public excited to spend billions on foreign countries over climate change? to check we thought we would ask the fox news critical analyst. a lot of americans are worried about the u.s. economy inflation has hurt them, a lot of people aren t working, and there are signs of the macroeconomy that we should be paying attention.
in the literal sense. in april, i announce the united states will double our public international financing to help developing nations tackle the climate crisis and today i m proud to announce that we will work with congress to double that number again. together with increased private capital and from other donors, we will be able to meet the goa of mobilizing $100 billion to support climate action in developing nations. could give climate action? you can be positive it s going to meet democratic donors raise. as the american public excited to spend billions on foreign countries over climate change? to check we thought we would as the fox news critical analyst. a lot of americans are worried about the u.s. economy, inflation has hurt them, a lot of people aren t working, and there are signs of the macroeconomy that we should be paying attention.
work, they ve come to it differently. i do think there is a fundamental shift. increasingly you will see hybrid situations where some people are in the office, other are in the office half the time because they ve recognized that they are able to do more by being at home and working that way. yes, i do. i think there has been a fundamental shift. it will change the way we approach work and the more money being thrown at people causing them to stay home is certainly being felt by small business and it is a negative. dana: on the inflation point, as this because it s very interesting how it all works together. put more money into the system. more people aren t working, prices go up. even if you got an increase in your wages, that s eaten up by spending more on staples, is that right? a good point. a great point. we can t use look at wage increases the way we did in the past. now wage increases, which is
know what they would benefit from? low-wage workers making more money and spending more money. how do we move forward when we don t agree why people aren t working? democrats say childcare issues. we look at the data, it doesn t show that. help us understand this. look, there s a lot of factors. the biggest is probably it just takes time to match workers to jobs. certainly the virus is out there. i think unemployment insurance has played a role. in some cases that can be a good role. it can help people find the right jobs for them. in other cases, it can have a down side. but the important thing is look forward. every one of those issues people talk about is going to solve itself over the next few months. what s the landing pad for after this? infrastructure plan, support for families and some form of unemployment insurance, not what we have now, but some cushion
threshold? can you get this ubi if you are working? these are pilot studies tucker: what do you think? i don t think everyone, in my opinion. what we are seeing right now, it s your point, right, around the rich? donald trump has been giving tax breaks to the top 1% i don t want to have tucker: i m just going to ask you one more time because i think this is the core question. do you really believe that giving people something they haven t earned to make them feel good about themselves, it increases the dignity? do you really believe that? is there any evidence at all? but in your question, there seems to be an assumption that people aren t working, right? tucker: not saying they aren t working, it s money they haven t earned. they are valued what do we, as a society, actually value? how do we determine were? we know that automation is going