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This is Money
Shares on Wall Street have fallen more than 300 points to their lowest level in 14 months after the head of the US central bank backed drastic plans to pull the economy out of a looming recession. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke threw his weight behind a massive package of tax cuts and spending increases designed to kick-start the US economy, adding fuel to fears that the world's biggest economy is facing an increasingly desperate 2008.
US recession worries spark Wall Street plunge
Rising inflation may prevent the Bank of England from cutting rates as fast as it had intended in the wake of the credit crisis, its deputy governor has warned.
Interest rate cuts 'won't be easy' says Sir John Gieve
British manufacturers are facing the greatest pressure to raise prices in more than a decade, according to an authoritative survey which will stoke inflation fears. The British Chambers of Commerce said industry was having to cope with dramatically eroded margins and falling order books. It urged the Bank of England to cut interest rates in response.
Pressure mounts for high street price rises
The role of the bond insurers in the sub-prime crisis is coming under renewed focus after ratings agency Moody's threatened to cut Ambac's AAA credit rating after reporting write-downs of $3.5bn (2bn).
Ambac facing rating cut over sub-prime write-downs
Doom-laden forecasts that world oil supplies are poised to fall off the edge of a cliff are wide of the mark, according to leading oil industry experts who gave warning that human factors, not geology, will drive the oil market. A landmark study of more than 800 oilfields by Cambridge Energy Research Associates (Cera) has concluded that rates of decline are only 4.5 per cent a year, almost half the rate previously believed, leading the consultancy to conclude that oil output will continue to rise over the next decade.
World not running out of oil, say experts
The monetary authority of the world's second-biggest economy faces a looming succession crisis as parliamentary meltdown threatens to create a vacuum scenario at the Bank of Japan (BoJ).
Parliamentary deadlock could leave Bank of Japan without a governor
As rebukes go in the close-knit world of central banking, few hurt as much as the scathing indictment of US Federal Reserve policy by Professor Anna Schwartz. The high priestess of US monetarism - a revered figure at the Fed - says the central bank is itself the chief cause of the credit bubble, and now seems stunned as the consequences of its own actions engulf the financial system. "The new group at the Fed is not equal to the problem that faces it," she says, daring to utter a thought that fellow critics mostly utter sotto voce.
Anna Schwartz blames Fed for sub-prime crisis
Nearly one pound in every seven spent on consumer goods in 2007 was spent over the internet, a jump of more than 50pc since 2006, new figures reveal.
Businesses coin it in as online sales up 50pc
Alistair Darling's dithering over planned reforms to the capital gains tax (CGT) regime threatens to cause a false market in AIM-listed shares, stockbroker Brewin Dolphin has warned. If his proposal to increase the tax rate from 10pc to 18pc is left unchanged, Brewin Dolphin fears a flood of share sales before the start of the new tax year on April 5 that will artificially reduce prices.
CGT increase 'will create false market on AIM'