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Task for the week: limit the fallout from biggest oil shock in decades | Richard Partington

The world’s finance ministers and central bank governors gather in Washington this week for the half-yearly meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, with the global economy in a perilous spot.Not since the foundation of the Bretton Woods institutions late in the second world war have global conflicts triggered this much economic turbulence. The volatile 1970s come close. But the US-Israeli war on Iran, coming so soon after the Covid pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, take the prize.Even if a durable peace deal in the Middle East can be reached, there will still be permanent economic scars

about 23 hours ago
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Low-tax Texas opens London office to lure jobs and investment

The US state of Texas is putting UK businesses in its crosshairs with the launch this month of a dedicated London office to lure jobs and investment to the low-tax Lone Star State.Texas recently secured approval for the new site, adding to a growing list of international offices from which it can try to draw corporate heavyweights across its borders.It is the latest sign that Texas lobbyists, led by the office of the state’s Republican governor, Greg Abbott, are widening their economic ambitions beyond American borders, having already had success luring jobs and investment from rival US states including California, Delaware and New York.Lobbyists working in the London office are likely to court UK bosses with incentives including new, fast-track business courts and multimillion dollar subsidies. Texas charges neither corporation nor income tax

1 day ago
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Record number of homes in Great Britain turn to green energy as fuel prices soar

British households are turning to green home energy upgrades in record numbers to try to keep bills down as the Iran crisis sends global oil and gas prices soaring, data from leading energy suppliers suggests.Figures show demand for solar panels, electric vehicles and heat pumps in Great Britain has leapt since the war began on 28 February, as households brace for a sharp increase in monthly payments when the next energy price cap takes effect in the summer.Energy bills are expected to increase by 18% from July – to the equivalent of £1,929 for the typical annual dual-fuel tariff – after Europe’s benchmark gas price rose by about 50%.Octopus Energy, the biggest GB energy supplier, shared figures with the Guardian showing its heat pump orders had more than doubled in March compared with February, while sales of solar power systems were up almost 80% and new leases of electric vehicles rose by more than 85%.The same trend was noted by the sector’s second biggest player, British Gas, which has recorded a 250% increase in solar panel installation inquiries since 28 February

2 days ago
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‘Abhorrent’: the inside story of the Polymarket gamblers betting millions on war

“Horekunden” was rapidly losing patience.His frustration was with the Institute for the Study of War, a US thinktank which produces a daily map of the frontline in Ukraine.For Horekunden, and other anonymous gamblers, the map was a “disjointed, incoherent mess … like the painting of a five-year-old”. Therefore it was no use to them in their aim: to settle a bet on the online prediction market Polymarket.The map they were unhappy with depicted the city of Kostyantynivka, which Ukrainian troops have been holding for five months amid shelling and swarms of drones

2 days ago
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Federal workers struggle to find roles a year after Trump cuts: ‘I’ve applied to over 250 jobs’

Maggie was faced with a tough choice in February 2025: quit her job at the US office of personnel management or be unceremoniously fired.Though she was a few months pregnant at the time, Maggie was offered one of the buyouts that were offered to tens of thousands of federal government employees by the office of personnel management.“I couldn’t be without health insurance through the delivering of my baby,” said Maggie, who requested to omit her last name for fear of professional repercussions. “I was going to have six to seven months of paid parental leave, because I’d been on my job for five years and I accrued time.”She took a buyout offer in May 2025 and, like many federal employees who took buyouts, and was placed on administrative leave until September 2025

2 days ago
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McDonald’s CEO blames mother’s etiquette training for awkward burger bite in video

The chief executive officer of McDonald’s recently blamed etiquette guidance from his mother for a February on-camera taste test that made him a target for ridicule – and summarily recorded another video of him eating one of the fast-food giant’s offerings in a manner potential consumers found awkward.Chris Kempczinski suggested to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) earlier in April that he was simply heeding maternal advice to never talk with his mouth full when he took the humorously small bite at the center of a viral video which depicted him discussing and sampling the new Big Arch burger from McDonald’s.“I blame it all on my mom because she told me, ‘Don’t talk with your mouth full,’” Kempczinski remarked to Tim Higgin, a WSJ columnist, in an interview captured on video. “And I think, probably in that case, I should have just said, ‘You know what? To hell with it. I’m gonna go talk with my mouth full

2 days ago
societySee all
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Thousands of unpaid carers to face DWP repayment demands during overhaul

about 11 hours ago
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Online abuse is a daily reality for women in public life | Letters

about 18 hours ago
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French children’s menus were a surprising disappointment – with one exception | Letter

about 18 hours ago
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This ‘old lady hand’ is giving ageism the finger | Brief letters

3 days ago
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Four in 10 UK parents struggle to afford essentials for newborns, study says

4 days ago
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Alarm in health service over Palantir staff being given NHS email accounts

5 days ago

Rory McIlroy ignores Jack Nicklaus’s advice and tames the deadly 12th at Augusta | Andy Bull

about 10 hours ago
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There’s hot, and then there’s the back nine on Sunday at Augusta when there are five players within two shots of the lead.The TV weathermen reckoned it was 30C but then they weren’t down at Amen Corner when Rory McIlroy was standing on the tee at Augusta National’s 12th hole, that little rinky-dink 155-yard par three, tied for the lead and waiting for the wind to drop long enough that he could get his shot off.Four days ago, they asked Tom Watson what was the one change he’d make to this golf course if he could.Watson didn’t blink.“I’d fill in that creek in front of No 12.

”“Touché” said Gary Player,“Good move,” added Jack Nicklaus,“The 12th is the critical hole on the golf course, to be honest with you, and I think everybody here understands that,” Watson said,Player nodded his head,“That hole,” he said, in his own inimitable way, “has crippled more men than polio.

” And yes, everyone in the room blinked when he said it,Point is, no matter how big your lead is, you haven’t won the tournament till your tee shot is safely across the water,Just ask Jordan Spieth, who coughed up a five-shot lead when he scored a quadruple bogey there in 2016, and seems to have been playing with a twitch ever since,Nicklaus once called the 12th “the hardest hole in tournament golf”,He had a rule for it: don’t go for the pin if its on the right.

Play for the middle of the green, make your par, and get the hell across to the 13th tee box.“It comes down to whether you want to keep it in play,” he said, “or go for a two and come away with a five.” And Nicklaus knows.In all his years playing here, Nicklaus only put it in the water once.Well, this Sunday the competition committee had stuck the pin (where else?) way out there on the far edge.

It was so far to the right that it could have stood in the special election they held for Marjorie Taylor Green’s seat in the week.The 56-man field had made exactly three birdies on it between them all day, and were a combined 15 over par.And here’s McIlroy, tied for the lead with Justin Rose, who is playing just a few hundred yards along in front of him, and only a shot ahead of Cameron Young, Russ Henley and Tyrrell Hatton, who’s already back in Buttler Cabin, waiting to see if there would be a playoff or not.McIlroy had already lost the tournament once, when he broke another of Nicklaus’ laws on another of the course’s par threes earlier in the round.“No fucking double bogeys,” Nicklaus had told him in the week.

But at the 4th, McIlroy got himself in a mess when his tee shot flew left on to the fringe of the big bunker.He managed to blast his way out to 9ft but still somehow ended up taking three putts after he missed a wretched little heartbreaker from two feet, that rolled right around the back lip of the hole and out again.The sigh of disappointment blew dust all the way up to the clubhouse.His putter was so cold it was a wonder that no one asked him if they could nuzzle up to it to cool off.And that was before he made another bogey on the other par three, the 6th, where his putt from the first cut stopped dead on the edge of the green.

At the point McIlroy was back to nine under for the tournament, two shots behind Young,He’d already become the first man to take a six‑shot lead into the weekend of the Masters,Now it looked as if he was going to be the first man to lose the tournament after doing it, too,McIlroy being the man he is it was roundabout now that he finally turned up for his round,He earned one birdie at the 7th when he finally made a putt, and another at the 8th with a wizardly second shot that steamed around the trees into the heart of the green, and all of a sudden he was right back in contention again.

Has anyone who can make the game look so easy ever found it so damn complicated?And now here he is at the 12th, Golden Bell, with the wind whipping in in great gusts along the creek, riffling the needles in the pine trees, and the crowd so quiet out there now that the stewards will tell you off just for coughing, with that famous yellow flag just begging him to try to reach it and everyone thinking: “Just do what Nicklaus told you too.” And now the club is coming down and the ball is going up, up, up into the bright blue sky and over the water and it’s falling down again into the little sliver of parched grass just beyond the bunker and it’s bouncing once, twice, three times and rolling around right up towards the cup.Seven feet left, and a birdie putt that even he couldn’t miss.A lot of men have lost the Masters at the 12th.Now McIlroy’s one of the few who won it there.