News
Tim Harford interviews Matt Parker on his latest book ‘Love Triangle’ Read more
now playing
The magic of trigonometry
Tim Harford interviews Matt Parker on his latest book ‘Love Triangle’
Federer’s 54%: Tennis stats explained
How Federer became the best in the world winning just over half the points he played
Is increasing turbulence making flying more dangerous?
Exploring the link between bumpy flights and climate change
Are women 14 times more likely to die in natural disasters?
We unpick the idea that women outnumber men by 14 to 1 as casualties of natural disasters
Does a language die every two weeks?
Languages are disappearing. We investigate claims of how often this happens.
Is planet Earth getting greener?
Jordan Peterson says Earth has greened by 20% in 20 years. Is he right?
Are companies making more money from their customers?
We investigate claims mark-ups are larger than ever
Do we eat a credit card's worth of microplastic each week?
We look at whether humans really ingest five grams of microplastic on a weekly basis
Where have Cuba’s people gone?
We investigate the collapse in the Caribbean island’s population
Exclusions, black holes and dividing by zero
Plus special educational needs in Wales and Ghanian nurses in the UK
Who pays when trade wars heat up?
We look at Donald Trump’s claim that tariffs are a tax on other countries
How long does it take to turn around an oil tanker?
Plus, Migrants vs Pensioners and Ed Miliband’s energy auction claim
Nate Silver: Do risk-takers run the world?
Poker player and polling analyst Nate Silver on his new book
How do you count millionaires?
Plus, asylum seeker costs, private school bets and Baumol's cost disease
Do 85% of the world’s population practice a religion?
Counting religions across the globe – is the world getting more religious or less?
Could the winter fuel cut cost more than it saves?
Plus, ONS transgender stats, early-onset cancer, and puzzles you’re meant to get wrong
The puzzles you’re meant to get wrong
Alex Bellos sets Tim Harford logical conundrums designed to deceive
How do you breed seventeen octillion rats?
Plus, GPs working less, the UK working less, and Wetherspoons wanting to pay less tax.
Are 672 billion pounds of corn eaten in the US every year?
A lot of corn is eaten in the United States, but is it really 2.5kg per person per day?
Should the government target persnuffle?
Plus, childhood obesity, birds hitting windows and Sir David Spiegelhalter’s origin story.
Uncertainty, probability and double yoked eggs
Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter on his new book, The Art of Uncertainty
When are numbers like a horse at a gymkhana?
Plus: the taxes of 60 very rich people, water bill spreadsheets, and is 0 a small number?
Nobel prize: Why are some countries so much richer than others?
Why Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics
Do US crime statistics miss out the most violent cities?
Plus: MP capital gains claims and grizzly bear berry habits
Is Trump right about violent crime in Venezuela and the US?
Donald Trump says Venezuela is becoming safer than the US. Is he right?
Are older drivers more dangerous?
Plus, winter fuel deaths, prison sentence maths and leaves on railway tracks.
What can economics learn from sport?
From loss aversion to game theory, how sports provide evidence for economic theories
Do we have enough clothes for the next six generations?
We delve into the stats on the scale of the fashion industry
Did 20 million votes really go missing in the US election?
We investigate a viral graph that suggests turnout was drastically lower than in 2020
Do fossil fuels get $7 trillion in subsidies?
We investigate a huge estimate for how much governments pay to coal, gas and oil
Can Elon Musk save the US Government $2 trillion?
We look at whether DOGE can successfully balance the US budget.