The daily drama of money and work from the ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ.
World Service,Β·4512 episodes
Guinea is resource-rich but cash poor. Can the economy survive its political problems?
The ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ tracked a shipping container for a year. It's home and we broadcast from inside.
The man who sent the first internet message exactly forty years ago.
Economist Allan Meltzer warns America may be heading towards a fresh financial crisis.
"Food security" is the great buzz phrase. But does it make sense?
The Sage of Omaha, Warren Buffett, explains his investment theories and his personal life.
An Iranian businessman on how sanctions hurt. And an American who wants tougher measures.
One year on from Iceland's banking crash, what can the country do to get out of the mess?
Should dollars disappear as the main world currency? And catching debtors who vanish.
Why companies reject new rules on derivatives.
Why family businesses can survive for centuries, with Ernest Antoine Seilliere.
Liberia's President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf explains why mining deals were re-written.
How rich people ask tougher questions before giving. And charity and different cultures.
Why pointing a finger in a crisis prevents understanding. Do bosses make much difference?
Voices of the homeless of Moscow, on the impact of the financial crisis.
Did central banks ignore the warning voices?
If you want to get a job, creep very low indeed.
Do big speculators have too much power?
How hot air from your computer might stifle the planet.
Can Rwanda go from an agrarian to a computer economy in one generation?
What really revolutionised China's economy.
Latvia - is it still teetering on the edge of economic collapse?
The views from Africa, India and Germany on the effects of the financial crisis.