EU auditor: Brussels too slow to tame Big Tech, FAA clears Boeing 737 Max, Johnson’s green economy

EU auditor: Brussels too slow to tame Big Tec...

Up next

Can a Mexican cartel stronghold host the World Cup?

SpaceX will go public next week with the largest retail allocation ever attempted in a megacap IPO, and India’s viral Cockroach Janta Party is challenging Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Plus, the FT’s Ciara Nugent explains the safety concerns swirling around World Cup host city Gu ...  Show more

Why foreign investors love Boston

Saudi Arabia’s wealth fund is swapping foreign CEOs for local ones and Reed Hastings officially steps down from the board of Netflix. Plus, FT-Nikkei names Boston as the best US city for foreign investment. Mentioned in this podcast:​​Saudi wealth fund replaces foreign CEOs with ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Will safety issues at Boeing seriously impact air travel?
Marketplace All-in-One

Consumer trust in Boeing is wearing thin since an airplane door ripped off a 737 Max 9 in January, which has been followed by a string of other recent Boeing safety incidents. So how much does faltering trust actually impact the business of air travel? Plus, President Joe Biden w ...  Show more

Boeing CEO’s Comeback Plan for 2024 Takes a Hit Five Days In
Bloomberg Businessweek

Bloomberg News Aerospace Reporter Julie Johnsson explains how Boeing has suffered a series of quality lapses that threaten to erode trust in the manufacturing prowess of the biggest US exporter — notably its 737 Max aircraft. Eurasia Group Chairman Cliff Kupchan shares the firm's ...  Show more

No, Really. Are We Finally Heading Toward a Recession?
Big Take

First Republic Bank is the latest financial institution to fail amid turmoil across the industry. Meanwhile, inflation is still high. Layoffs are rocking some industries. And labor shortages are throttling others. So… are we about to face the recession that economists have been p ...  Show more

It’s definitely not a windfall tax!
Political Fix

We start with that huge bailout package for struggling families announced by the chancellor and the controversial taxes he raised to fund it - a £5bn windfall tax on energy companies with more to come.

The FT’s economics correspondent Delphine Strauss ...

  Show more