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This is Money
Silvio Berlusconi's return to power in Italy is a nightmare come true for the European Central Bank, opening the way for a Rome-Paris axis with the political muscle to force a change in monetary policy.
Berlusconi plans Paris-Rome axis to humble European Central Bank
Gordon Brown said he "welcomed" proposals made by the banks to help ease the credit crunch at yesterday's breakfast summit and confirmed that the Government remains in contact with the Bank of England to find a way through the crisis.
Bank of England urged to take new measures to ease crisis
The pound tumbled yesterday after inflation came in below expectations, bolstering speculation that the Bank of England will soon cut interest rates further.
Sterling falls as inflation stays steady
Almost 600,000 people will be unable to refinance their debts this year after finding their usual lines of credit cut off, forcing them to go bust or sign expensive bankruptcy-lite agreements.
Debt Britain: 600,000 face bankruptcy
Mortgage lenders are continuing to raise their rates as fears grow of massive job losses in the City and on the high street.
Unemployment looms large as crunch bites deep
Rocketing food and energy prices shunted US wholesale prices up sharply by 1.1pc last month. Energy prices surged 2.9pc in March, compared with a 0.8pc rise in February.
Food and oil cost America dearly
The American housing market is continuing to decline and could suffer a record number of defaults in the second half of the year after bank repossessions more than doubled in March.
US housing market faces record number of defaults
Oil prices have continued to hit new peaks amid worries about supply setbacks and the weakness of the dollar. The price of North Sea Brent crude rose $1.73 to $111.57 a barrel after touching $111.85 while US crude jumped $1.8 to $113.56 before the close of trading in New York.
Worries fuel oil prices to new highs
Excitement about the potential of Brazil as a massive new source of oil and gas intensified yesterday after a senior energy ministry official declared that the newly found Carioca field could have 33bn barrels in place.
Surprise discovery off coast of Brazil may confound the oil and gas doom-mongers
HM Revenue & Customs has been accused of "double standards" after the disclosure that its 83,000 staff do not have to submit receipts to cover claims ranging from meals to hotel accommodation and travel and are entitled to expenses without forking out any money.
HMRC is accused of double standards over staff expenses