Hello and welcome to World Business Report from the BBC World Service.
I'm Leanna Byrne and on this edition we get the latest on oil prices.
We also go to Denmark where military drones are big business at Europe's biggest flying tech show.
Namibia is also rolling out the red carpet for investment.
But first let's start with how do you solve a problem like price rises?
Well that's the question a lot of central banks around the world are grappling with and we've seen a flurry of decisions this week on interest.
rates.
Switzerland and Norway both cut their interest rates today.
The Bank of England and the United Kingdom held steady.
And the US Federal Reserve said it's still planning cuts this year,
but don't get too attached to the forecast.
Here's the US Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell setting out the risks he sees for the world's largest economy.
Changes to trade, immigration, fiscal and regulatory policies continue to evolve,
and their effects on the economy remain uncertain.
The effects of tariffs will depend, among other things, on their ultimate level.
Expectations of that level, and thus of the related economic effects,
reached a peak in April and have since declined.
Even so, increases in tariffs this year are likely to push up prices and weigh on economic activity.
Now, this is such a common theme, uncertainty facing the economy.
That led to the Bank of England holding rates at 4.25%.