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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

  • Taliban restrictions on women's work has wiped out the progress built up over the last decade.
    OMER ABRAR/AFP

    From the BBC World Service: A United Nations Development Programme report says it took less than a year to wipe out $5 billion of economic output in Afghanistan. Plus, a new club of nations called the European Political Community is meeting for the first time. And, what kind of impact could additional E.U. sanctions on Iran actually have?

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  • More hiring happened in September – but the overall number of job openings has fallen
    David McNew/Getty Images

    Susan Schmidt of Exchange Capital Resources helps us clear up the job picture. Elon Musk’s deal with Twitter appears to be back on. We look at how climate change can factor into retirement planning.

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  • Elon Musk has tweeted "The bird is freed".
    Carina Johansen/NTB/AFP via Getty Images

    But why? There are a few possible reasons for the billionaire’s change of heart. Florida’s flatness works against its post-Ian cleanup efforts. The state of the housing market carries opportunity for all-cash buyers.

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  • Fresh E.U. sanctions on Russia include an oil price cap
    Angelos Tzortzinis/AFP

    From the BBC World Service: The E.U. outlined its latest details after Russia illegally annexed four regions in Ukraine. Plus, OPEC+ oil production cuts could be the biggest since 2020 when the pandemic drastically reduced global demand. And, India is usually the world’s biggest cotton exporter, but flooding has seen the country import the commodity, putting pressure on its domestic textile production sector.

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  • When recession doesn’t have to mean what it did decades ago
    Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images

    David Kelly of J.P. Morgan talks recession with us. The Supreme Court will tackle cases that deal will terrorism and social media. We look into the toll the act of “swatting” takes on people.

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  • CEOs see a recession coming. Soon.
    Getty Images

    That’s according to a survey from audit, tax and advisory firm KPMG. The Commerce Department appears poised to curb Chinese access to U.S. chips. Coming off the news of Kim Kardashian’s SEC fine, we look at the cooling celebrity-crypto relationship.

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  • Thousands of people in Pakistan are in temporary shelters after their homes were flooded.
    FIDA HUSSAIN/AFP

    From the BBC World Service: The United Nations new fundraising target is five times higher than originally requested, as the agency seeks to deal with “a second wave of death and destruction.” Plus, how reducing food waste at supermarkets is proving a challenge for a U.K. charity which redistributes surplus food. And, the yen currency hardly blinked despite North Korea’s decision to fire a ballistic missile over Japan for the first time in five years.

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  • Those falling gas prices were nice while they lasted
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    The oil-producing cartel known as OPEC+ will cut down output even further to combat sagging prices. We check in for more on the U.K. government’s tax cut reversal. We talk banking systems with Julia Coronado of MacroPolicy Perspectives. If you’re looking for a used car, be on the lookout for some vehicles that might have recent flooding history – in Florida.

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  • British about-face on tax policy brings some calm to markets
    Spencer Platt/Getty Images

    That U.K. tax cut plan that had a lot of people shaken up? Not happening, apparently. What do we really know about the rise of Chinese president Xi Jinping?

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  • The proposal to scrap the rate paid by the highest earners in the UK had been criticised as unfair at a time of rising living costs.
    OLI SCARFF/AFP

    From the BBC World Service: The British finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng has now abandoned one of his flagship economic policies after it roiled markets. Plus, why shares of banking giant Credit Suisse plunged nearly 10% in early trading. And, people in Tunisia have taken to the streets to protest the high cost of living and food shortages.

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Victoria Craig