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Victoria Craig

Victoria Craig is the former host of Marketplace Morning Report’s global edition produced by the BBC World Service in London. She graduated from the University of Missouri (go Tigers!) with a degree in broadcast journalism. Before moving to the U.K. in 2017, she covered Wall Street,  reporting for five years on U.S. stocks and the economy from New York City. When she’s not in front of the microphone, you can find Victoria baking or curling up with a good book at home, hiking in the English countryside, or travelling through her new European playground.

Latest from Victoria Craig

  • Some tax relief from the IRS, courtesy of inflation
    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    Because of the size of inflation these days, the IRS has had to make bigger adjustments than usual – which could be helpful. We talk bank runs with Philip Dybvig, one of the winners of the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences.

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  • A lesson in tribal sovereignty … from Tesla
    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    Tesla’s entries into tribal lands also means entry into a different legal sphere as well. A reporter from The Markup helps shed some light on inequitable pricing on broadband internet around the country. We talk Miami real estate with Amy Scott as the second season of “How We Survive” debuts.

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  • Hong Kong tackles a brain drain
    Anthony Kwan/Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Hong Kong’s new leader John Lee says he wants to rebuild the economy and attract potential new employees from around the globe. The economy has been undermined by an ongoing political crackdown following the national security law introduced in 2020 and coronavirus restrictions. Plus, while many countries have severed ties with Russia, India is pinning its defense export hopes on a joint venture. And, how can South Africa make its energy system more robust after years of blackouts?

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  • Happy birthday, Clean Water Act
    Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images

    The act, instituted in 1972, turns 50 today. We measure its impact thus far. Stifel Financial’s Lindsey Piegza helps dish out some market perspective. Then, we dive more into the difficult job landscape that awaits people who’ve been incarcerated.

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  • Someone who spent time behind bars shares perspective of the job market
    Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    First, the U.S. plans to sell more oil to help dial back gas prices. Then, a Miami-based realtor opens up about his struggles finding employment after doing time in prison. 

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  • Clara Mattei, author of "The Capital Order," argues government attempts to impose austerity reflect a deeper history of labor force suppression.
    Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Natural gas prices have spiked since the Kremlin limited supplies to European Union countries. The European Commission is outlining measures to try and control high energy prices. Plus, China delays publishing key economic data during the Communist Party Congress. And, why a city in Uganda has banned women from sitting in the front cabin of trucks.

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  • Today’s a tax deadline, which could be an October surprise for some
    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    For those who asked for a six-month extension on filing 2021 tax returns, today’s the deadline. Julia Coronado discusses market activity with us. It’s costing more and more to stay in a hotel these days.

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  • A look at China at a time of slower growth
    Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

    We break down some of the significance of the national congress of the Chinese Communist Party, which is underway. Our latest subject for Econ Extra Credit got us thinking about the concept of classic, bottom-to-the-top upward mobility in corporations. 

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  • New U.K. finance minister Jeremy Hunt says bringing forward measures from an economic plan on 31 October is designed to calm financial turmoil.
    Leon Neal

    From the BBC World Service: Days into his new job, the new U.K. finance minister Jeremy Hunt hopes to appease volatile markets, unsettled by his predecessors plan for tax cuts. Plus, the United Nations Children’s Agency says the war and rising inflation have pushed 4 million children into poverty across eastern Europe and central Asia. And, the female farmers in Sierra Leone who are transforming swamp land to grow rice.

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  • Special: Secret Money, Public Influence
    Getty Images

    This election cycle, “Marketplace Morning Report” traveled to Arizona, where, in less than a month, voters will decide whether some of the biggest campaign spenders should have to reveal their true identities. How this measure got on the ballot, what it hopes to achieve and what opponents say about it provide lessons about the so-called dark money that can sway elections near you. We look at the consequences of hidden political spending for everyday people, with a case study of higher electric bills for Arizonans. We also explore how a citizen-led ballot initiative could change the rules and the pushback from those who believe there’s a right to anonymity as part of the right to free speech. And, what it takes to get one of these ballot measures in front of voters and where else across the country we’re seeing an effort to curb this mystery money.

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