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Cambridge Endowment for Research in Finance (CERF)

 

Tata Steel workers to vote on strikes amid job peril

BBC Business News - Fri, 16/02/2024 - 18:47
Unions say they are "prepared to fight" in response to job losses at Tata Steel sites.

Household energy bills predicted to fall by nearly £300 a year

BBC Business News - Fri, 16/02/2024 - 11:25
Cornwall Insight forecasts a 15% drop, taking the typical annual bill to £1,635 - the lowest in two years.

NatWest unveils highest yearly profit for 26 years

BBC Business News - Fri, 16/02/2024 - 08:51
Paul Thwaite is the bank's new boss replacing Alison Rose who resigned after a row over Nigel Farage's account.

Shopping rebounds on supermarkets and January sales

BBC Business News - Fri, 16/02/2024 - 08:37
Retail figures reveal a 3.4% sharp rise at the beginning of 2024 following December's record fall.

The brewing secrets behind tastier no-alcohol beer

BBC Business News - Fri, 16/02/2024 - 00:17
There's huge demand for low and no-alcohol beer and breweries are competing for the best flavour.

Whisky takes a shot at China's Baijiu-dominated market

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 23:36
Western alcoholic drinks are trying to take on baijiu, which dominates the country's spirits market.

Xbox, Nintendo or PlayStation: does it still matter?

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 22:20
Why the war between the big games console makers may be coming to an end.

Mon 19 Feb 17:00: The long road to the Bank of Ghana, 1825-1966.

Cambridge Finance Seminar Series - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 20:11
The long road to the Bank of Ghana, 1825-1966.

The talk is based on the research work that formed part of a PhD thesis on the origins of the central bank in Ghana. The broader work analyses the events from 1825, the year when the ‘Trade Ounce,” a trade unit associated with the Atlantic slave trade, ceased to be widely used in the Gold Coast and other parts of West Africa, to 1966, by which time a central bank had been established and was operating in Ghana. The talk will cover the concept of central banking promoted in the British colonies by the Bank of England, against external advice from the likes of John Maynard Keynes on India, Thomas Balogh on Ghana, and Richard S. Sayers more widely. The talk will also highlight the internal guidance at the Bank of England given by Otto Niemeyer who had been involved in the establishment of central banks in several countries including Australia, New Zealand, and Egypt. The presentation draws on a wide range of primary sources, including internal Bank of England and Bank of Ghana documents and material held at the Balme Library (University of Ghana) and the national archives in Britain and Ghana. It also draws on several collections of private papers including those of Balogh, Andrew Brimmer, Arthur Lewis, Oliver Sprague, and Paul Warburg.

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Facebook £3bn legal action given go-ahead in London

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 17:24
A mass legal action alleges Facebook abused its dominance to monetise 45 million UK users' personal data.

Jeremy Hunt considers reducing spending to fund tax cuts

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 13:35
Jeremy Hunt is looking at cutting billions in public spending to fund tax cuts in his Spring Budget.

British Gas sees profits increase 10-fold

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 10:37
The company managed to recover losses of £500m it made during the height of the energy crisis.

What is a recession and how could it affect me?

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 08:08
A recession means the UK economy has shrunk for two three-month periods in a row.

UK economy fell into recession at the end of 2023

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 07:46
The economy shrank by 0.3% between October and December, in a sharper fall than expected.

Elon Musk says SpaceX's legal home moved from Delaware to Texas

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 03:02
It comes after a judge in Delaware annulled his $55.8bn pay package from electric carmaker Tesla.

Japan unexpectedly slips into a recession

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 02:10
The figures also indicate that Japan has also lost its position as the world's third-largest economy.

Future data centres may have built-in nuclear reactors

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 01:08
As AI uses more electricity, new data centres could have their own nuclear power stations.

Offenders confused about ethics of AI child sex abuse

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 00:51
A charity warns that creating or viewing such images is still illegal, even if the children are not real.

X took payment from terrorists, campaigners say

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 00:36
Campaigners at the Tech Transparency Project in the US found paid-for features for organisations.

Pryzm nightclub boss blames lack of students for closures

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 00:22
Peter Marks, who runs the UK's biggest club chain, says students are going out later and spending less.

What is GDP and how is it measured?

BBC Business News - Thu, 15/02/2024 - 00:15
A basic guide to how the health of the economy is measured, and why that calculation matters.