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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

  • OSHA required health care employers to provide things like training and adequate ventilation, but those protections were temporary.
    Brandon Bell via Getty Images

    We try to explain why some Medicare premiums are actually going down. Explosions on the Nord Stream pipeline have some suspecting sabotage. We check in on the state of the SNAP program as the White House talks hunger and nutrition today.

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  • IMF warns U.K. over its economic future
    ZACH GIBSON/AFP

    From the BBC World Service: In a move usually directed towards emerging and developing markets, the International Monetary Fund has openly criticized the British government’s tax strategy unveiled on Friday. Since then, sterling has plummeted and the cost of borrowing increased, but the Treasury insists on going ahead with the plan. And in Germany there’s been muffled reactions to what is now thought to be an act of sabotage on the Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea.

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  • Though the Fair Housing Act requires appraisers not to discriminate based on race, there are still big discrepancies between the value of homes owned by white versus Black or Latinx households.
    Scott Olson/Getty Images

    Today’s Case-Shiller national home price index shows a decline in home prices from June into July. Fed leaders get up front about their message about raising interest rates. After the British pound’s not-so-great day, we check in with the BBC’s Victoria Craig.

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  • Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on August 26, 2022 in New York City. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 1000 points following a speech by federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell that the Fed will again raise interest rates as inflation continues to drag on the American economy.
    Spencer Platt/Getty Images

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 1 percent, which puts it in bear territory with other big indexes. In the home buying world, more people appear to be backing out of deals. And in Georgia, embryos can be claimed as dependents.

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  • A general view shows Bank of England (BoE) in the City of London on September 22, 2022. - The Bank of England hiked its interest rate sharply again to combat decades-high inflation but warned the UK economy was slipping into recession.
    ISABEL INFANTES/AFP via Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: The Bank of England will face questions on its response to yesterday’s decline in the value of sterling. The pound came back slightly after reaching record lows on Monday. And Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks to the BBC’s Zoe Kleinman about the lack of women in the tech sector – he’s at a forum dedicated to getting more women into the industry.

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  • LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 26: Exchange rates are advertised outside a Bureau de Change on September 26, 2022 in London, England. The British Pound continued its slide against the US dollar today, fluctuating between $1.03 and $1.07 this morning. Earlier this month, it dropped below the $1.14 mark for the first time in four decades.
    Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images

    Doubts about Britain’s fiscal policy hang over the fall of its currency, the pound. On the side of the U.S., markets experienced a bit of a turnaround after a rugged week. Then, we check in on how the world of social media is trying to catch up to TikTok.

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  • NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 23: Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on September 23, 2022 in New York City. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has dropped more than 400 points as recession fears grow. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

    The British government unveils a tax cut plan as its currency drops in value. We then look into what happens when you send hundreds of millions of dollars to the wrong people by accident.

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  • A strong U.S. dollar is great for Americans who want to buy foreign products. For American companies that sell products abroad? Not so much.
    Matt Cardy/Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Sterling bottoms out at a low not seen since the U.S. dollar was created 230 years ago. The markets saw a continued sell off of the British currency after huge tax cuts were unveiled by the U.K. treasury last week. And in Italy, Giorgia Meloni seals victory for the far right after touting tax cuts, immigration restrictions and Euroskeptic economic reforms.

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  • Emergency federal unemployment benefits — equivalent to roughly $6 billion per week — are set to expire in two and a half weeks.
    Thinkstock via Getty Images

    The Labor Department also notes what kind of fraud, and where. The SEC has charged Boeing with misleading investors after two deadly crashes. The worlds of commercial and residential construction carry differing experiences within the economy.

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  • Supply chain issues and a strike are bogging down Boeing's ability to deliver planes.
    JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images

    The SEC has charged Boeing and its ex-CEO for misleading investors in the wake of two deadly crashes. The Fed paints a harsher unemployment picture. Puerto Rico’s water system is reeling in the wake of Hurricane Fiona.

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Victoria Craig