Episodi
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“Say what you like about Mussolini but he did make the trains run on time.” This phrase is the political equivalent of “every cloud has a silver lining” – but does it have any factual basis? Mussolini’s dictatorship in Italy was full of atrocities, brutal suppression and propaganda. Did it also create a more efficient railway network? We speak to Professor Ruth Ben-Ghiat about the truth of the claim and why the Mussolini regime wanted us to believe it. Presenter: Lizzy McNeillProducer: Lizzy McNeillResearcher: Esme WinterbothamSeries Producer: Tom CollsEditor: Richard VadonSound Master: James BeardProduction Co-ordinator: Katie Morrison.
Image: Benito Mussolini in his train studying maps. (Photo by ullstein picture/ullstein picture via Getty Images)
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Are most Americans barely holding their head above water when it comes to personal finances? That’s what various US politicians and news outlets keep suggesting. They can’t stop using a statistic about people living “paycheck to paycheck”. But what does this really mean?
We go behind the headlines to unpick the numbers. Contributor: Ben Krauss, journalist Presenter: Charlotte McDonaldProducer: Vicky Baker and Lizzy McNeillSeries Producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound Engineer: Andrew MillsEditor: Richard Vadon
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When World War Two came to Greece, a period of terrible human suffering followed. There was a brutal battle with Italian and then Nazi forces, followed by an occupation in which thousands were executed and a terrible famine swept the nation.
There’s an often repeated number that appears to capture the brutality of this time – that 10% of the Greek population died during the war.
We investigate where this statistic comes from and whether it is true.
Presenter: Charlotte McDonaldProducer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Neil Churchill Editor: Richard Vadon
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President Elect Donald Trump has created a new government advisory group – the Department of Government Efficiency or ‘DOGE’ - to help cut the US budget.
The world richest man, Elon Musk, will co-head the department and has pledged to cut ‘at least $2 trillion’ to ‘balance the budget’. But is this possible? We talk to Professor Linda Bilmes about what DOGE could or couldn’t do and how she balanced the budget in the 1990’s.
Presenter: Charlotte McDonaldProducer: Lizzy McNeillSeries producer: Tom Colls Production co-ordinator: Katie Morrison Sound Mix: Andrew Mills Editor: Richard Vadon
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Governments around the world have promised to fight climate change. But are they also pumping an absolutely massive amount of money into subsidies for fossil fuels? In 2022, an IMF working paper estimated that global subsidies for fossil fuels totalled $7 trillion. But when you dig into that research, you find that this number might not mean what you think it does. We explain how they reached that conclusion, with the help of Angela Picciariello from the International Institute for Sustainable Development, and Nate Vernon, one of the co-authors of the IMF paper.
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Just hours after Donald Trump claimed victory in the US presidential election, rumours started swirling that something was afoot. A graph went viral on social media that appeared to show there were 20 million more votes cast in 2020 than in the 2024 election. Where had these supposedly “missing” votes gone? Conspiracy theorists on both sides of the political spectrum began shouting claims of fraud. The answer, it turns out, is rather more straightforward. Presenter: Charlotte McDonaldProducer: Lizzy McNeillSeries producer: Tom Colls Production co-ordinator: Katie Morrison Sound Mix: Hal Haines Editor: Richard Vadon
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A huge quantity of clothing is produced every year around the world. But is so much made that there are already enough tops, trousers, skirts and all the rest to clothe humanity for decades into the future?
That’s a claim that has been percolating around the internet recently, that there are already enough clothes for the next six generations.
Tim Harford and Beth Ashmead Latham explore the source of this claim and, with help from Sabina Lawreniuk from Nottingham University, find that the evidence behind it is far from persuasive.
Presenter: Tim Harford and Bethan Ashmead LathamProducer: Bethan Ashmead LathamSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound Mix: Annie GardinerEditor: Richard Vadon
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The great theories of economics seem to have great explanatory power, but the actual world is often far too complicated and messy to fully test them out.
Professor Ignacio Palacios-Huerta, an economist at the London School of Economics has an answer – sport. In the contained setting of competitive sport, he says, the rules are clear and you know who is doing what. This means, with some analysis, you can see vibrant illustrations of well-known economic theories playing out before your eyes.
Ignacio talks to Tim Harford about some of his favourite economic theories, demonstrated in action in sporting competition.
Presenter: Tim HarfordProducer: Natasha FernandesSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: John Scott Editor: Richard Vadon
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Could the cut in winter fuel payments cost thousands of lives?Is it really true that criminals sentenced to three years will be out of prison in two months?Are older drivers more dangerous than young ones?Do Southeastern Railway shift 50 million leaves from their lines?
Tim Harford investigates some of the numbers in the news.
Presenter: Tim HarfordReporters: Bethan Ashmead Latham and Nathan GowerProducer: Natasha FernandesSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: James BeardEditor: Richard Vadon
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On the campaign trail for the US presidency, former president Donald Trump has been saying that the US is becoming a more dangerous than Venezuela.
He also claims that the crime data for the US that the FBI collects is missing the most violent cities.
Is he right? Tim Harford investigates, with the help of Bastian Herre from Our World in Data and Jay Albanese from Virginia Commonwealth University.
Presenter: Tim HarfordProducer: Bethan Ashmead LathamSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound Mix: Annie GardinerEditor: Richard Vadon
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Was an MP wrong about the number of people who pay capital gains tax?
Why is 2% the magic number for the rate of inflation?
Donald Trump says US crime figures are fake. Are they?
How do you work out how many buffaloberries a bear eats in a day?
And we fact-check a claim about the prevalence of suicide among GPs. For information and support follow this link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/actionline
Tim Harford investigates some of the numbers in the news.
Presenter: Tim HarfordReporters: Nathan Gower and Bethan Ashmead LathamSeries Producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Rod FarquharEditor: Richard Vadon
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The question of why some countries are rich and some poor has been described as the most important question in economics.
Perhaps that is why the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics to Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James Robinson for their work on the importance of institutions in the economic fortunes of nation states.
Tim Harford explains the economic theory that underpins their award.
Presenter: Charlotte McDonaldReporter: Tim HarfordProducer: Bethan Ashmead LathamSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Giles Aspen Editor: Richard Vadon
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Can we teach BBC political editor Chris Mason some new maths skills?Do 60 of the UK’s richest people pay 100% tax?Have water bills fallen in real terms since 2010?When it comes to HPV and cervical cancer, is zero a small number?
Tim Harford investigates some of the numbers in the news.
Presenter: Tim HarfordProducers: Nathan Gower and Bethan Ashmead LathamSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Sarah HockleyEditor: Richard Vadon
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Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter is one of the great communicators of probability and uncertainty.
His new book, The Art of Uncertainty, explains how to approach uncertainty, luck, probability and ignorance.
Tim Harford talks to Sir David about double yoked eggs, the Bay of Pigs, and his top tips for politicians who want to communicate evidence and uncertainty. Presenter: Tim HarfordSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: John ScottEditor: Richard Vadon
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Are childhood obesity rates going down?Do 35 million birds die every year in the UK after hitting windows? How much money could the Chancellor find by changing the debt rule? And Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter contemplates the probability of his own conception.
Tim Harford investigates some of the numbers in the news, and in life.
Presenter: Tim HarfordReporter: Charlotte MacDonaldProducers: Bethan Ashmead Latham, Natasha Fernandes and Nathan GowerSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Neil ChurchillEditor: Richard Vadon
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National Geographic magazine recently wrote that “people in the United States eat more than 672 billion pounds of corn per year, which breaks down to more than 2,000 pounds per person annually”.
Is this really true?
Tim Harford investigates all the things that we don’t eat, that are counted in this number.
Presenter: Tim HarfordProducer: Bethan Ashmead LathamProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Giles AspenEditor: Richard Vadon
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Are GPs really working less hours per week?Does Wetherspoons really pay one in every £1000 of tax in the UK?Are more people in the UK economically inactive?How long does it take two rats to produce 17 octillion rats?
Tim Harford investigates some of the numbers in the news.
Presenter: Tim HarfordReporters: Natasha Fernandes and Bethan Ashmead-LathamProducer: Nathan GowerSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Sarah HockleyEditor: Richard Vadon
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Why do some puzzles make us immediately leap to the wrong conclusion?
That’s the subject of Alex Bellos’ new book Think Twice, which has page after page of questions designed to deceive.
Alex sets Tim Harford some of his favourite puzzles.
Presenter: Tim HarfordSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie Morrison and Janet StaplesSound mix: Donald MacDonaldEditor: Richard Vadon
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The government is encouraging pensioners to claim pension credit in order to remain eligible for winter fuel payments. Will people sign up - and might that end up costing the exchequer more than it saves?
The Office for National Statistics has downgraded the status of a new statistic aiming to measure how many people are transgender. What went wrong?
Cancer appears to be on the rise in people under 50. But are more people dying?
And try your hand at a puzzle you’re likely to get wrong.
Tim Harford investigates some of the numbers in the news.
Presenter: Tim HarfordProducers: Natasha Fernandes and Bethan Ashmead-LathamSeries producer: Tom CollsProduction co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Sarah HockleyEditor: Richard Vadon
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We don’t usually do god on More or Less, but one listener got in touch to ask us to investigate a stat used by an Anglican priest on a BBC radio programme.
Speaking on the “Thought for the Day” slot, Reverend Lucy Winkett said that around 85% of the world's population practice a religion.
Is this true? We speak to Conrad Hackett, from the Pew Research Center, and the person whose research is the source for the claim.
Presenter: Tim Harford Producer: Natasha Fernandes Series producer: Tom Colls Production co-ordinator: Katie MorrisonSound mix: Nigel AppletonEditor: Richard Vadon
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