also on the show, could technology help africa grasp its agricultural potential? i will be speaking to the big boss of a company helping to spread two spread farming across that vast continent. wherever you are joining across that vast continent. wherever you arejoining me from around the world, a big hello and warm to the showstopping russia s invasion of ukraine has devastated the population, leaving tens of thousands feared dead and millions displaced, destroying lives and uprooting the very fabric of that country. and at the heart of the ukrainian economy is agriculture, and in particular, growing crops, a nation known as the breadbasket of europe, disrupting that production that production is having a dramatic effect on the global food supply, having a dramatic effect on the globalfood supply, sending global food supply, sending prices globalfood supply, sending prices through the roof. the result is some of the world s poorest countries are now paying more money for les
Questioning the methodology
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ukraine has made it scarcer stop the price per metric oz is generally between 20, $280 per metric tonne. now it is at least $1300 per metric tonne, so it is having a massive impact on farmers.- so it is having a massive impact on farmers. how can you help farmers impact on farmers. how can you help farmers afford impact on farmers. how can you help farmers afford fertiliser i help farmers afford fertiliser if they are already struggling? financing goes a long way. today the market basically runs on cash and carry. we created an ai on cash and carry. we created an al to create a scoring process to get a risk profile. based on this we are able to offer longer financing for them. so farmers only need to put up 30% of the total cost of fertiliser, or 50% to farmerline, and we deliver it to them, so we are solving the problem of logistics, we offer them training for free on how to farm well, how to adapt well
of what it will be. they re saying it could be 400 billion, it could be 500 billion. in additional revenue, and that s the number. that s the money that balances this bill. and it is for technical purposes being balanced outside of the official scoring process, and i take it that that has been considered good enough by the members of the more moderate members who were waiting for this official score. i think what they were looking for is just making sure that it s consistent with the other analysis that are out there. and it has been. i think they re convinced and they re right to be convinced that this bill will be paid for, that only people who make more than 400,000, and corporations that often have found ways not to pay their fair share, they re the ones that are going to be paying for this bill. completely different than in the trump era, they passed a tax cut that 86% of the money went to the top 1%. they didn t pay for a dime of