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UK remains only G7 economy to languish below pre-pandemic levels

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UK remains only G7 economy to languish below pre-pandemic levels

Vital revisions to UK information point out that Britain is the one G7 financial system that is still smaller than it was earlier than the pandemic, regardless of an improved efficiency within the second quarter that diminished fears of recession.

Workplace for Nationwide Statistics figures launched on Friday confirmed that UK gross home product for the three months to June this 12 months remained 0.2 per cent under the extent it reached within the closing quarter of 2019.

Beforehand, official information had indicated that GDP had risen 0.6 per cent above pre-pandemic ranges by June.

Against this with the UK’s failure to return to pre-pandemic ranges, the eurozone financial system reached 1.8 per cent above 2019 ranges within the second quarter. The US had recovered to pre-pandemic ranges by the beginning of final 12 months.

Friday’s UK progress downgrade was largely as a result of a decrease ONS estimate of 2020 output. Nonetheless, progress for 2021 and this 12 months was revised greater.

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The ONS now says the financial system grew 0.2 per cent between the primary and the second quarters of 2022.

This compares with its earlier estimate of a 0.1 per cent contraction for the interval — an enchancment that can allay fears that the UK financial system is already sliding into recession. The change was pushed by a greater than anticipated efficiency {of professional} and monetary providers.

The information counsel the UK financial system entered the price of dwelling disaster earlier than it had managed to completely get well from the pandemic, laying naked the problem going through Britain’s new prime minister, Liz Truss.

In a reference to the tax reduce and borrowing plans of Kwasi Kwarteng, Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, mentioned the information “makes the chancellor’s fiscal plans look much more untenable”.

Kwarteng’s announcement final week of £45bn of debt-funded tax cuts triggered turmoil within the sterling and gilts markets, pushing the Financial institution of England to take emergency motion to keep away from a meltdown within the UK pensions sector. With the federal government’s deliberate tax cuts forecast to maintain inflation greater for longer, markets at the moment are pricing in considerably greater rates of interest by mid-next 12 months.

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“The general image is that the financial system is in worse form than we beforehand thought even earlier than the total drag from the surge in inflation and leap in borrowing prices have been felt,” Dales mentioned.

Bar chart of UK, real GDP percentage change, Quarter 4 (Oct to Dec) 2019 to Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2022 showing The UK is the only G7 economy to not have yet recovered to pre-coronavirus levels of real GDP

Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, mentioned the figures will compel the Workplace for Finances Duty, the UK fiscal watchdog, to revise down additional its estimates for future potential GDP. They might additionally imply that the tax-to-GDP ratio will probably be barely greater than beforehand estimated.

“The harm inflicted to the financial system’s provide aspect by Covid and Brexit is even bigger than beforehand thought,” Tombs mentioned.

Some particulars within the information launch additionally revealed that households have been damage by excessive inflation. Actual family disposable revenue fell 1.2 per cent within the second quarter, the biggest of the 4 successive drops as fast-rising costs diminished the worth of wages.

The family saving ratio fell to 7.6 per cent, from 8.3 per cent within the earlier quarter and from 26.8 per cent at its peak within the second quarter of 2020, when the nation was in a stringent lockdown. That is nonetheless above pre-pandemic ranges, suggesting households have scope to soak up some future revenue shocks.

Grant Fitzner, ONS chief economist, mentioned: “These new figures embrace extra correct estimates of the monetary sector and the way the prices going through the well being sector modified all through the pandemic.”

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Musk Offers $100 to Wisconsin Voters, Bringing Back a Controversial Tactic

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Musk Offers 0 to Wisconsin Voters, Bringing Back a Controversial Tactic

Elon Musk is bringing back his most controversial gambit from the 2024 presidential election: paying voters as part of a plan to identify and turn out conservative-leaning ones.

The super PAC that Mr. Musk founded to funnel his fortune into Republican causes, America PAC, said on Thursday that it was offering $100 to registered voters in Wisconsin who sign a petition “in opposition to activist judges” or refer others to sign it. Mr. Musk has been using the group to spend millions of dollars to elect a conservative candidate for the Wisconsin Supreme Court in an April 1 election.

The petition reads: “Judges should interpret laws as written, not rewrite them to fit their personal or political agendas. By signing below, I’m rejecting the actions of activist judges who impose their own views and demanding a judiciary that respects its role — interpreting, not legislating.”

The purpose of the petition is multifaceted: Drive attention from the news media, increase awareness and voter registration among conservative voters, and help America PAC collect data on the most energized Wisconsinites who are likely to turn out for the conservative candidate, Brad Schimel.

Mr. Musk carried out a nearly identical maneuver in battleground states before the November election, generating significant legal and political debate.

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The Philadelphia district attorney sued to stop the distribution of those lottery-style payouts, which went up to $1 million to voters who signed a document in support of the First Amendment. But the day before Election Day, a Pennsylvania judge declined to halt the sweepstakes.

America PAC’s revival of the use of petitions, and the wording of its new document in Wisconsin, reveal two of Mr. Musk’s priorities as he wields wide power in Washington.

The first is his focus on the court election in Wisconsin, which could swing control of the state’s top judicial body back to conservatives after liberals won a major victory there in 2023. Mr. Musk’s super PAC and an allied nonprofit group have spent over $11 million to try to elect Judge Schimel, which would again push the battleground state rightward on issues like redistricting and abortion rights.

Mr. Musk’s electric car company, Tesla, has also sued Wisconsin to challenge a state law prohibiting manufacturers from owning dealerships. In January, eight days after Tesla filed the suit, Mr. Musk wrote on X, “Very important to vote Republican for the Wisconsin Supreme Court to prevent voting fraud.”

The second is Mr. Musk’s budding obsession with removing judges he sees as thwarting President Trump’s agenda. He posts daily on X about his frustrations with the federal judiciary, and the refreshed language of the new petition points to that focus.

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But despite the petition from Mr. Musk’s group denouncing judges who are openly political, there are few doubts about where the loyalties of his preferred candidate in Wisconsin lie: Judge Schimel is a longtime defender of Mr. Trump who dressed up as the president last Halloween.

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London’s Heathrow airport to be closed all day after fire cuts power

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London’s Heathrow airport to be closed all day after fire cuts power

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London’s Heathrow airport has been forced to close until midnight after a fire at a nearby electricity substation caused a “significant power outage”.

“Due to a fire at an electrical substation supplying the airport, Heathrow is experiencing a significant power outage,” Heathrow airport wrote in a post on X.

The London Fire Brigade said in a statement late on Thursday that a large fire had broken out at an electrical substation in Hayes, near Heathrow, after a transformer caught alight.

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The statement did not mention the airport, but it said the fire had “caused a power outage affecting a large number of homes and local businesses”.

“This is a highly visible and significant incident, and our firefighters are working tirelessly in challenging conditions to bring the fire under control as swiftly as possible,” said assistant commissioner Pat Goulbourne.

“This will be a prolonged incident, with crews remaining on scene throughout the night. As we head into the morning, disruption is expected to increase, and we urge people to avoid the area wherever possible.”

Firefighters have set up a 200-metre cordon and evacuated 150 people, said Goulbourne.

Heathrow said the airport would be closed until “23h59 on 21 March”.

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“Passengers are advised not to travel to the airport and should contact their airline for further information,” the airport added.

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Hollywood filmmaker charged with defrauding Netflix of $11 million

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Hollywood filmmaker charged with defrauding Netflix of  million

Carl Erik Rinsch at an event in Los Angeles in 2015.

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Hollywood filmmaker Carl Erik Rinsch has been charged with defrauding Netflix to the tune of $11 million. He had been working on a TV series for the streamer that was never completed. Instead, according to prosecutors, the 47-year-old director spent the streamer’s funds to speculate on cryptocurrency, stay in high-end hotels and rentals and buy luxury cars.

Police in West Hollywood arrested him this week. The FBI’s New York Field Office and the Acting U.S. Attorney of the Southern District of New York indicted Rinsch on charges of wire fraud, money laundering and unlawful monetary transactions. Those charges could land him in prison for decades.

The saga began in 2018, when Netflix agreed to pay Rinsch to make White Horse — later named Conquest — a science fiction TV series about an artificial, humanlike species called the “Organic Intelligent.” The series was reportedly a passion project for Rinsch and his then-wife Gabriela Roses Bentancor, and was already underway. According to a 2023 New York Times investigation, the streamer gave Rinsch a coveted “final cut” deal to make decisions about the project. Before that, Rinsch had only made one big budget feature — 47 Ronin, a samurai story starring Keanu Reeves that bombed at the box office. 

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Between 2018 and 2019, Netflix paid $44 million for the series. Rinsch resumed shooting episodes in Brazil, Uruguay and Budapest. Then, according to prosecutors, he asked the streamer for another $11 million to complete the production.

That never came to be.

The New York Times reported that during production, Rinsch’s behavior grew more and more “erratic”; crew members complained about his onset behavior, and privately, his wife filed for divorce in 2020.

The FBI and the Acting U.S. Attorney of the Southern District of New York say that instead of completing the promised television series, Rinsch spent that extra $11 million on himself — speculating on securities and cryptocurrency and living the high life. FBI assistant director Leslie Backschies said in a statement that Rinsch used the money “to finance lavish purchases and personal investments.” According to the indictment, which identifies Netflix as “Streaming Company-1,” that included staying in luxury hotels, and buying millions of dollars worth of high-end furniture and antiques and hundreds of thousands in a watch and high-end clothing, along with five Rolls-Royces and a Ferrari.

Even after losing money on the stock market, Rinsch told Netflix that his series was “awesome and moving forward really well,” according to the indictment.

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Though Rinsch claimed that the streamer owed him money after Netflix cancelled the show, an arbitrator ruled in Netflix’s favor last year, requiring the director to pay the company $11.8 million. The streamer declined to comment to NPR about Rinsch. His attorney Anne Carney told NPR she can’t discuss the case. According to the Associated Press, Rinsch appeared in federal court in Los Angeles with shackles on his arms and legs and agreed to post a $100,000 bond. The Associated Press reports that his attorney Carney said at that hearing that she had not yet seen the prosecution’s evidence against Rinsch and “the allegations in this case are purely financial.”

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