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Georgie Frost

This is Money: Saving that Pound in your pocket (twice)

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

This is Money

This is Money: Saving that Pound in your pocket (twice)
Welcome to the This is Money show and podcast, in partnership with NS&I. This week, Personal Finance Editor Rachel Rickard Straus, and Consumer Affairs Editor Lee Boyce from the Financial Website of the Year team up with Georgie Frost, Financial Broadcaster of the Year, to give you the very best in the week's money journalism. On the agenda: Your pound is being assailed from all angles, from scammers to through-the-floor rates. So what's to be done about it? Well, there is one White Knight on the horizon, and the team from This is Money have some strategies of their own. This is Money is presented by Georgie Frost, in partnership with NS&I
Guests:

Rachel Rickard-Straus, Lee Boyce


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: What does the UK Public Finances data tell us about the post-Brexit economy

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: What does the UK Public Finances data tell us about the post-Brexit economy
Another piece of post-Brexit economic data may give us a better scope of how Brexit has affected the UK: Public sector borrowing figures may suggest a deterioration of the Government's finances in the months to come. Chris Hare, Economist at Investec, joined the Morning Money team to discuss what this new information means.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, Chris Hare


Published:
Georgie Frost

This is Money: The Only Way Is Essex

Georgie Frost
This is Money: The Only Way Is Essex
Once again, it's time for This is Money, in partnership with NS&I. This week, Editor Simon Lambert and Consumer Affairs Editor Lee Boyce from the Financial Website of The Year team up with Financial Broadcaster of the Year Georgie Frost, to boldly proclaim the dust settled on post-Brexit Britain. Well, sort of. With pre-Brexit employment figures, and post-Brexit CPI and RPI all out, a lot of people might be unhappy with the results. Not least as Current Accounts and Annuities are slashed, and pensions deficits and house prices continue to soar. Are we in a bit of a slump, or is this just the landscape now? We'll take you through it all, and also take a look at thousands of electricity customers being over-billed due to an Imperial legacy, and Lee Boyce waxes lyrical on the joys of living at the seaside. This is Money is presented in partnership with NS&I.
Guests:

Simon Lambert, Lee Boyce


Published:
Georgie Frost

Rachel Springall from Money-facts.co.uk on The News Review 18/08/16

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

Consuming Issues

Rachel Springall from Money-facts.co.uk on The News Review 18/08/16
Georgie Frost is joined in the studio by Rachel Springall from Money-facts.co.uk. Today they discuss the record number of A-level students achieving a university place and the latest government plans to tackle childhood obesity. Plus we take a look at the pounds slump against the Euro as some airports offer as little as 99 cents to the pound. All these stories and more on The News Review,
Guest:

Rachel Springall


Published:
Sarah Lowther

Morning Money: Free Movement and Farming - will Brexit hurt UK agriculture?

Sarah Lowther
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: Free Movement and Farming - will Brexit hurt UK agriculture?
The National Farmers' Union is launching a post-Brexit options paper for its members on what trade deal they would like with the European Union and the rest of the world. Over 34,000 non-UK born workers were employed on UK farms in 2014, and a key area now being discussed is the importance of free movement of labour for the farming industry. So just how vital an issue is this? Joe Aldridge has been speaking to the NFU's Vice President Guy Smith to find out.
Guests:

Chris Bailey, Joe Aldridge, Guy Smith


Published:
Georgie Frost

This is Money: It's Brexit Bonanza!

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

This is Money

This is Money: It's Brexit Bonanza!
Once again, it's time for the This is Money podcast. Every week, in partnership with NS&I, Financial Broadcaster of the Year Georgie Frost and Financial Website of the Year This is Money team up to go through all the finance stories you need to know this week. Georgie is joined in the studio by Editor Simon Lambert and Personal Finance Editor Rachel Rickard-Strauss. We’re going to be talking about the latest CMA report- could we be seeing a range of new apps to make choosing and switching bank accounts easier? And on top of that, the Bank of England cut in interest rates has caused a number of impacts since last week with some good news for first time house buyers but more worrying for savers, we’ll be looking at the effects on mortgages and pensions. Meanwhile the Bank of England has said it wants to encourage investors to take 'more risk'. So how can you make money in this post-Brexit Britain without gambling your nest egg away? And finally we’ll be tackling the perennial topic of inheritance tax. This is Money is presented by George Frost, in partnership with NS&I.
Guests:

Simon Lambert, Rachel Rickard-Straus


Published:
Juliette Foster

Is Portugal facing a banking crisis? Patrick Jones investigates with Daniel Gros of the CEPS

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

Ed's Macro-Economic View

Is Portugal facing a banking crisis? Patrick Jones investigates with Daniel Gros of the CEPS
Though Italy and it's banking crisis (specifically Monte Dei Paschi) has been the central focus of concerns over the stability of Eurozone financial institutions recently, Portugal is also facing serious issues, as what some are calling an ongoing banking 'crisis' — not quite equal to the one in Italy, but significant nonetheless, dominate people's thinking in the Iberian state. Share Radio's Patrick Jones investigates.

Published:
Georgie Frost

This is Money: From Brexaustion to Brexcuses.

Georgie Frost
This is Money: From Brexaustion to Brexcuses.
Time again for This is Money, Financial Broadcaster of the Year Georgie Frost and Financial Website of the Year This is Money team up with NS&I to close off a turbulent week, with the best of financial advice and analysis. Yes, it has been a turbulent week, with Natwest veering towards negative rates, Santander rolling back the UK's most popular current account, and Lloyds scrapping more of their workforce. Can savers find their way through it all? Well, we'd better hope so, as the issue this week most pressing is the FCA's findings that over 5 million credit cards may never be paid off, and around 1.4 million people are barely making any repayments at all. In short, we're drowning in plastic. But the first step is educating ourselves, and this podcast is the place to start! This is Money is presented by Georgie Frost, in partnership with NS&I.
Guests:

Simon Lambert, Lee Boyce


Published:
Georgie Frost

This Is Money: Good Deal or Bad Day?

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

This is Money

This Is Money: Good Deal or Bad Day?
Once again, it's time for the This is Money podcast. Every week, in partnership with NS&I, Financial Broadcaster of the Year Georgie Frost and Financial Website of the Year This is Money team up to go through all the finance stories you need to know this week. First up: the ARM takeover by Softbank - does this prove that Britain is open for business, or did we just write ourselves out of the Internet of Things? Then, we take a look at the new cabinet, what would you do if you were in charge of the country? Or pensions? Then, banks are 'named and shamed' for offering loyal savers record low interest rates. All this and more, on This is Money. This is Money is presented in partnership with NS&I
Guests:

Simon Lambert, Richard Browning


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: What are the implications of Brexit on trade? Peter Bishop of the London Chamber of Commerce discusses.

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: What are the implications of Brexit on trade? Peter Bishop of the London Chamber of Commerce discusses.
In the wake of the referendum there is a huge amount of uncertainty in many areas, not least regarding exports, trade agreements and the single market. As deputy Chief Executive of the London Chamber of Commerce, Peter Bishop oversees 5000 trade enquiries, 12 trade missions and 140,000 export and import documents a year. Peter gives Share Radio his view on the potential implications on trade in light of the EU Referendum.
Guest:

Peter Bishop


Published: