Tia Mowry & Cory Hardrict Present Love On Instagram Amid Divorce

Tia Mowry and her estranged husband Cory Hardrikt Want fans to know it’s all love between them after the 44-year-old actress filed for divorce from Cory, 42, after 14 years of marriage and two children.

On Monday, the family reunion actress shared portraits on Instagram and spoke about the love and support she’s received since confirming the end of her relationship with Cory, who she remarried in 2013.

Every book begins with a dedication page, and this one is dedicated to you: my friends, my family, and my community.

The outpouring of love I have received from you over the past week has been so encouraging and humbling. I am so grateful to you all.

New book, first chapter follows.

Love Tia ❤️

Cory must also have felt the love Tia was sending her followers because he left a heart and sparkly emoji showing his love for his estranged wife amid their divorce. In response, Tia replied:

“I love you (heart emoji)”

Tia Mowry says she’s starting a new chapter

Following her message of thanks to supporters, a grinning Tia shared another Instagram reel that touched her as she opened a new chapter. She wrote in the caption.

“I am love. I am peace.”

The audio over a video of Tia smiling for the camera seemingly confirmed the star’s message.

“You’re losing yourself. I know you hate to admit it. There are many other people you could fall in love with. You choose yourself.”

Previously, The Shade Room reported that Tia and Cory are divorcing due to “irreconcilable differences.” Minutes after news broke about the two, the twin confirmed the news on Instagram:

I’ve always been honest with my fans and today is no different. I wanted to share that Cory and I have decided to go our separate ways. These choices are never easy and are not without sadness.

Roommates, are you shocked that Tia and Cory are getting along so well while divorcing?

Russia lashes out at Ukraine however is in agony

Cars are seen on fire in Kyiv, Ukraine, October 10, 2022 after Russian missile attacks as Russia’s attack continues.

Valentin Ogirenko | Reuters

Russia has dramatically ramped up its missile attacks on Ukraine over the past 48 hours, but experts say the country is running out of options — as well as supplies and ammunition — on the battlefield.

Air raid sirens rang out again in several regions of Ukraine on Tuesday, and emergency services warned that further Russian attacks were very likely. Ukrainian officials reported that power infrastructure in the western city of Lviv was hit earlier, while the southern city of Zaporizhia was also attacked this morning.

The latest attacks come a day after a series of Russian attacks launched in response to last weekend’s bombing of Russia’s prized bridge across the Kerch-Crimea Strait, hitting various Ukrainian cities, including the capital Kyiv. At least 19 people were killed and more than 100 injured in the strikes, emergency services said.

Ukraine’s leadership has said it will not be intimidated by the latest spate of attacks, with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pledging to inflict more pain on Russian forces on the battlefield.

Inventories are running out

Despite Moscow’s recent show of strength over the past few days, experts see Russian forces looking increasingly desperate and ill-equipped.

“We know – and Russian commanders on the ground know – that their supplies and ammunition are running low,” Jeremy Fleming, director of GCHQ, one of Britain’s top intelligence agencies, will say on Tuesday.

“Russia’s armed forces are exhausted. The use of prisoners as reinforcements and now the mobilization of tens of thousands of inexperienced conscripts speak to a desperate situation,” he will say at the annual RUSI lecture, according to pre-released comments.

According to Fleming, the Russian people are beginning to understand the reality of the war. “You see how badly Putin misjudged the situation. Fleeing conscription, they realize they can no longer travel. They know that their access to modern technology and outside influences will be severely limited at the terrible human cost of their chosen war.”

Destroyed armored vehicles and tanks of the Russian Armed Forces after withdrawing from the town of Lyman in the Donetsk region of Ukraine on October 5, 2022.

Methane Acta | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Far removed from “the inevitable Russian military victory her propaganda machine produced,” it is clear that Ukraine’s prowess on the battlefield and in cyberspace, countering Russian propaganda, is “turning the tide,” Fleming will say, in the war.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision-making is looking increasingly flawed as “high-stakes strategy… leads to strategic miscalculation.”

CNBC has reached out to the Russian Defense Ministry for a response to Fleming’s comments and has yet to receive a response.

Fleming is not alone in believing that Russia is in its death throes both at war and at home.

Christoph Heusgen, chairman of the Munich Security Conference, told CNBC last week that there were signs that Russia was “falling apart”.

“It’s a black hole [in] Russia,” he said. “Putin has a monopoly on communications, on the media, his popularity remains high, but things are falling apart left and right. The military is under severe criticism, the industry is non-productive and there are signs that the country is falling apart, but it is difficult to predict how this will play out and how long it will take, but the end of Putin’s regime is proceeding much faster .” he told CNBC in Warsaw.

“Would you have believed that the Ukrainian military is where it is today and that it is advancing?”

“Push back against aggression”

The multiple attacks on Ukraine on Monday followed a strategic and symbolic blow for Russia: an explosion that partially destroyed the Kerch Bridge, which connects mainland Russia with Crimea, which Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.

Kyiv has not claimed responsibility for the bridge attack, although the blast was widely seen as humiliating for Moscow and another obstacle for Russia to deliver its troops to the occupied territories of southern Ukraine.

Zelenskyy said in his nightly address on Monday that Ukraine would not be intimidated by the strikes and promised that the battlefield would become even more “painful” for Russia in response.

Russian citizens recruited as part of the partial mobilization take part in combat training at the training centers of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) as the Russo-Ukrainian war rages on October 05, 2022 in Donetsk, Ukraine.

Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Lesia Vasylenko, a Ukrainian lawmaker, agreed. She told CNBC on Tuesday the country was prepared for more Russian attacks.

“We were not intimidated on February 24th [when Russia’s invasion began]we weren’t intimidated eight years ago and we haven’t been intimidated in centuries,” she told CNBC’s Squawk Box Europe.

“The only way to survive this reality is to fight back against the aggression, to fight back against the Russian military.”

Rachel Maddow says what the remainder of the mainstream media will not say about rising fascism

Rachel Maddow broke the political noise on Monday night to warn that a response from all of society is needed to effectively combat fascism. And that’s something we’ve done before.

Video:

Maddo says:

If you look at what happened the last time we faced something like this, criminal law can’t do everything. I mean, we can’t rely on everything in the courtroom to argue against it. If these are extremist far-right groups willing to use violence against anyone else to get their way, then that’s crime, and the courts and prison system matter, right? But there’s also a really important role for everything else.

For a response from society as a whole. I mean, the criminal justice system isn’t bulletproof, but it also doesn’t address the nature of these crimes in their entirety. To fight fascism effectively, to fight rising authoritarianism effectively – especially when it comes to undoing elections and trying to both gain and keep power in this country in ways other than democracy.

When it comes to the threat of violence as a means of seizing power, there isn’t just space; There is a need for a societal response. So that everyone does something. For activism. For journalism, for political organizing, to keep them out of real power.

I see a way for you to learn how we’ve been through something like this before and it can be unnerving if we’ll ever get away from it. On the other hand, knowing that we’ve encountered this before and encountered it effectively, and the Americans had great ideas on how to outflank and defeat these forces, that gives me energy.

Maddow doesn’t pretend that we don’t confront the rise of fascism and authoritarianism. The queen of context laid it out for Americans tonight – not only do we face this threat, we have done it before. This is exactly the topic she dedicates to her new podcast Ultra.

Ultra looks familiar because we’ve faced major threats like this before:

Sitting members of Congress support and encourage a conspiracy to overthrow the government. Insurgents accused of conspiring to end American democracy for good. Justice Department prosecutors under crushing political pressure. Rachel Maddow Presents: Ultra is the almost-forgotten true story of good old-fashioned American extremism fueled by proximity to power. When extremist elected officials are caught conspiring with the violent far right against America, this is the story of the efforts they will make to cover their tracks.

We must fight on all fronts and never miss a battle. This is an all hands on deck situation. It’s bad, it’s terrifying, but it’s also something each and every one of us can do something about.

Political organizing at the local level, driving people to the ballot box, knocking on doors – these things have power. community has power.

We can learn from those who fought this battle before us. We can use our wits to fight these anti-freedom forces on all fronts.

Ms. Jones is Co-Founder/Editor-in-Chief of PoliticusUSA and a member of the White House Press Pool.

Sarah hosts Politicus News and co-hosts Politicus Radio. Her analysis has been featured on several national radio and television news programs and talk shows, as well as in print media, including Stateside with David Shuster, as well as The Washington Post, The Atlantic Wire, CNN, MSNBC, The Week, The Hollywood Reporter and more.

Sarah is a member of the Society of Professional Journalists.

Kenan Thompson’s Amazon Prime Sale picks make your life simpler

We interviewed Kenan Thompson because we think you’ll like his choices at these prices. Kenan is a paid spokesperson for Amazon. E! has affiliate relationships, so we may earn a commission if you buy something through our links. Items are sold by the retailer, not E!. Prices are correct at time of publication.

Amazon shoppers look forward to Prime Day every summer, but this year we’re doubly lucky with a second big sale. Amazon’s Prime Early Access Sale includes two days of deals beginning October 11, 2022. There are big discounts in many product categories including household, fashion and beauty products. If you’re looking for some handy tips, you’ll find the Saturday Night Live icon Kenan Thompson has you covered with some unmissable recommendations.

Kenan has selected some useful kitchen gadgets, innovative cleaning gadgets and fun games for the whole family. If you like planning your Amazon purchases in advance, Kenan’s tips are a great place to start.

Extra flights in Asia could trigger airfares to come back down, however it could take time

Many flights canceled during the pandemic are returning to the skies this month.

Last week, Singapore Airlines and Scoot announced they would be adding dozens of flights to cities across Asia. Citing strong demand and eased border restrictions, both airlines announced more flights between Singapore and Japan, South Korea and Taiwan.

Scoot is also returning twice-weekly flights to Yogyakarta and Pekanbaru in October.

Most flights are resuming, but Scoot is adding some new routes. This month she will fly from Singapore to Lombok and Makassar, Indonesia. Scoot is also adding a seasonal non-stop service to Sapporo for travelers wanting to hit the slopes in Japan this winter.

Both airlines are preparing for more flights to China. Singapore Airlines launched flights to Beijing in September; This month it will fly to Chengdu, with a second weekly flight to Shenzhen. Scoot already flies to four Chinese cities, with flights to Wuhan and Zhengzhou starting this week.

Scoot isn’t the only low-cost airline expanding its services in the region. Cebu Pacific resumes its first international route from Davao to Singapore this month. And AirAsia is resuming several flights between Malaysia and Indonesia, including a new route connecting Bali with Penang.

Following the easing of border restrictions in Hong Kong, Cathay Pacific’s low-cost airline HK Express announced plans to add more than 400 flights between Hong Kong and Singapore, Bangkok and several cities in Japan by the end of the year.

More flights, cheaper fares?

James Marshall, vice president of global air at Expedia Group, told Squawk Box Asia on Monday that the limited flight choices available to travelers in Asia is “one of the reasons the prices are quite high.”

“The fact that airlines are increasing capacity is a very good thing,” he said. But whether airfares are peaking right now, Marshall said, “It’s very hard to tell.”

One problem is that the industry continues to struggle with staff shortages. The Hong Kong Aircrew Officers Association, a professional body representing Cathay Pacific pilots, warned last week that due to staffing shortages “airfares will continue to rise due to low supply combined with high demand” – a situation weighing on Hong Kong becomes “many years.”

Staffing issues have been blamed for last summer’s travel chaos in Europe and North America — a problem Asian airlines don’t want to repeat, Marshall said.

“Asia Pacific airlines have been very careful about how they are managing the surge… and making sure they are staffed at the right level so we don’t end up with operational issues that we have seen in other regions.” , he said .

If airlines remain cautious about adding new flights and demand remains strong – particularly with the end of the Christmas travel season – cheaper fares may not materialize for some time.

“We’re obviously optimistic about opening and reducing capacity, but demand is still very strong, especially towards the end of the year,” Marshall said.

GM and Ford shares fall after UBS downgrades point out weaker demand

General Motors’ world headquarters is located in Detroit’s Renaissance Center.

Paul Hennessy | flare | Getty Images

DETROIT — Shares of General Motors and Ford engine both fell on Monday after two downgrades by UBS, which cited expectations for weaker demand amid inflationary pressures.

Ford shares fell more than 8% during intraday trade before closing at $11.37 a share, down 6.9%. GM lost as much as 7.5% before closing at $32.29 a share, down 4%.

Both GM and Ford shares are down about 45% year-to-date. Both companies have a market cap of just under $50 billion.

UBS analyst Patrick Hummel wrote in notes to investors on Monday that he expects the U.S. auto industry to be challenging for the foreseeable future after posting record profits amid low supply and high demand during the coronavirus pandemic.

He predicted “that it will take three to six months for the auto industry to go into oversupply, bringing an abrupt end to a three-year period of unprecedented pricing power and profit margins for automakers.

The investment firm downgraded Ford to sell from neutral and GM to neutral from buy.

UBS continues to favor GM over Ford as the company picks up momentum in the third quarter and has fewer production woes. Hummel said UBS expects a “solid quarter” for GM, which is scheduled to report third-quarter results on October 25.

Ford said last month that around 40,000 to 45,000 vehicles were affected by the parts shortages, mostly trucks and SUVs with high profit margins that dealers couldn’t match. Ford also said at the time that it expected to book an additional $1 billion in unexpected supplier costs in the third quarter.

Ford is expected to report third-quarter results on October 26.

– CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

Taina Williams says fabulous as she claims he hasn’t sorted his daughter in nearly a 12 months

Taina Williams calls out Fabolous and claims he hasn't looked after his daughter in almost a year while wishing her a happy birthday.

It looks like there might be a little feud in The Family when it comes to that Fabulous and some of his loved ones.

On Monday he took to Instagram to do a special birthday post for him and Emily B’s baby girl Journey Jackson. He shared a photo of him and Journey and said:

I called you Journey because it really was. You may not know when you will go through it, but you will get it in the end. I don’t think you can have trust if you don’t trust the REISE. You taught me that, so I look at you with understanding and love.
Your life assures that everything will add up.”

Not too long after Fabolous took the job, Emily’s eldest daughter and Journey’s big sister Taina Williams commented on the post, claiming that Fabolous hasn’t bothered with Journey for almost a year.

She said in her comment, “This post is hilarious… ‘Possibly not know when you’re going through it, but you’ll get it in the end,’ is translation for = I haven’t looked after my daughter for almost a year and don’t even ask about her well-being because IDC & I’m bitter and just a father of two beautiful sons to manipulate. Stop playing with the internet.”

Fabolous and Emily also share two sons, Johan and Jonas. They welcomed their baby girl Journey in 2020.

Fabolous nor Emily B addressed Taina’s comment at this point. We will continue to update you as this develops.

TSR STAFF: Jade Ashley @Jade_Ashley94

Belarusian activist Ales Bialiatski and human rights teams obtain 2022 Nobel Prize

Belarusian human rights activist Ales Bialiatski speaks after he and the Belarusian human rights organization Vyasna were awarded the 2020 Right Livelihood Award in Stockholm December 3, 2020.

Anders Wiklund | AFP | Getty Images

Belarusian human rights activist Ales Bialiatski, Russian human rights organization Memorial and Ukrainian human rights organization Center for Civil Liberties have been awarded the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize.

Bialiatski, 60, helped ignite the pro-democracy movement that began in Belarus in the 1980s. He has been in prison since 2021 for tax evasion, which is widely believed to be politically motivated. He served a prison sentence on the same charge from October 2011 to June 2014 and was arrested multiple times.

The Nobel Committee said he “devoted his life to promoting democracy and peaceful development in his homeland”.

The Civil Liberties Center was established in 2007 to support Ukrainian civil society, promote human rights and promote full democracy in the country.

“Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the center made efforts to identify and document Russian war crimes against the Ukrainian population,” the committee said.

“The center is at the forefront of bringing criminals to justice for their crimes.”

The final recipient, the Russian rights group Memorial, was founded in the former Soviet Union in 1987 to honor victims of political oppression.

In a press conference, Nobel Committee Chair Berit Reiss-Andersen said the award was “not addressing [Russian] President Putin … except that his government, like the government in Belarus, represents an authoritarian government that represses human rights defenders.”

She also called for the release of Bialiatski from prison.

Bialiatski’s campaign group Viasna has documented and opposed the use of torture on political prisoners in Belarus.

Alexander Lukashenko has been President of Belarus since 1994, when the country adopted a new constitution after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Bialiatski was arrested after widespread protests against Lukashenko’s regime in 2020 and 2021, which were met with violent crackdowns and thousands of arrests.

Belarus is Russia’s only European ally after Ukraine’s unprovoked invasion and also faces Western sanctions.

The Nobel Peace Prize is one of five awards awarded by a five-member committee elected by the Norwegian Parliament since 1901. It is designed to honor those who have “brought the greatest benefit to mankind”.

It is not the first time that it has been awarded to multiple award winners. In 2021, the Peace Prize was split between journalist Maria Ressa, co-founder of Philippine news site Rappler, and Dmitry Muratov, a Russian reporter. Both have worked to expose corruption and authoritarianism and have spoken out in favor of freedom of expression.

This year’s Nobel Prize for Literature went to French author Annie Ernaux.

Within the natural sciences, the physics prize went to Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger for “groundbreaking quantum information science”; the Chemistry Prize was awarded to Carolyn R. Bertozzi, Morten Meldal, and K. Barry Sharpless for work in click chemistry and bioorthogonal chemistry; and the Medicine Prize went to Svante Paabo for decoding the Neanderthal genome.

The economy prize, established by the Swedish central bank in 1968, will be announced on Monday.

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Halloween objects like House Depot’s 12-foot skeleton are key to retail technique

A child is looking at a Halloween costume on the stand. At the Target department store in Exeter Township on Tuesday afternoon for a story on Halloween costumes.

Ben hastily | Medianews Group | Getty Images

Over the past few weeks, Craig Cislo has unearthed the spray-painted tombstones in his attic, scoured websites for a giant animated reaper and convinced his teenage son to dress up as a bush to trick-or-treat.

Cislo, 43, of Dallas, plans to spend about $700 on Halloween to brighten up his family’s front yard decorations. He’s noticed that more neighbors are joining in, too, with big bouncy castles, animatronics and even an elaborate display inspired by The Walking Dead.

“My wife and I joke – because we walk every day – that we have competition this year,” he said.

As retailers gear up for a lackluster holiday season, many are planning to boost sales early by dangling a wider range of Halloween merchandise. Even as consumers restrict spending elsewhere, they say Halloween gives people a chance to get into the holiday spirit with relatively inexpensive celebrations leading up to Thanksgiving and Christmas.

home depot and lowes Stock up on a wide variety of spooky lawn ornaments, including giant mummies and skeletons. target Executives have expressed high hopes for sales of costumes, haunted house cookie kits and other Halloween items, even after the company’s earnings outlook was twice cut. and party townwhich sells costumes, balloons and bags of candy, plans to hire about 20,000 seasonal workers by October 31.

The boost around Halloween comes as more people return to in-person gatherings. Attendance is expected to return to pre-pandemic levels this year, according to the National Retail Federation’s annual survey, with nearly 70% of Americans planning to party.

The survey found total Halloween spending will rise to a record $10.6 billion, a jump from last year’s $10.1 billion. On average, consumers plan to spend $100 on candy, decorations, cards, and costumes.

For some shoppers, festivals like Halloween offer an escape from the worries of everyday life. As customers face unsettling headlines, Covid waves and political uncertainty, they are looking for more ways to celebrate and “bring joy to their families,” said Christina Hennington, Target’s chief growth officer.

“This is one of the reasons we continue to see such strength in our seasonal categories, which we expect to continue in the second half of the year,” she said on the company’s August conference call.

Herman, the 12-foot-tall skeleton, stands amid his fellow skeletons on October 20, 2020 in Middletown, Maryland. The Ferrone family bought a 12-foot skeleton from Home Depot, this year’s hottest Halloween decoration. It was stolen from their garden and they applied to the company for a replacement.

Marvin Joseph | The Washington Post | Getty Images

The 12 foot skeleton

Spring remains the most lucrative time of year for Home Depot and Lowe’s. But over the years, home improvement companies have expanded their Halloween and Christmas product lines.

In 1987, Home Depot added Christmas trees. This was followed by Christmas decorations in 2005 and Halloween merchandise in 2013. Then it saw an opportunity to expand seasonal sales in the fall, said Lance Allen, the company’s senior merchant of holiday decor.

The retailer’s merchandise team sought inspiration by visiting haunted houses and watching classic ’80s Halloween movies and Tim Burton movies. They also scoured trade shows, where they spotted a display of a giant skeletal torso that would inspire one of the company’s most popular Halloween products.

The skeleton at the show cost thousands of dollars, so Home Depot designed a 12-foot skeleton that costs $299 and debuted last year. It became a social media sensation and sold out.

When Home Depot’s “Skelly” returned this year, the first shipments sold out the first day they became available on July 15, Allen said. The retailer has been getting supplies ever since.

Other Halloween sales include a new Hocus Pocus-themed inflatable boat, which retails for $149, and an eight-foot-tall animated reaper that recites spooky phrases while moving its head and mouth, retails for $249 . The company also added a 15-foot-tall phantom — its tallest decoration to date — which retails for $399.

Rival Lowe released its answer to the skeleton this year: a 12-foot mummy that retails for $348.

Lowe’s also expanded its Halloween merchandise range by more than 20% this year and dedicated more store space to larger outdoor goods. Spooky-themed decorations were popular, like a life-size Freddy Krueger and a giant mummy, along with staples like scarecrows, haystacks and pumpkins, said Bill Boltz, executive vice president of merchandising.

Both Home Depot and Lowe’s say Halloween sales are going well, but don’t provide sales numbers in the category.

Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwards

Lowe’s debuted a 12-foot mummy this year to get customers excited for Halloween. It’s a retailer exclusive and retails for $348.

A “relatively inexpensive” splurge

It’s too early to tell exactly how Halloween sales will pan out this year. Merchandise is already in stores, but sales tend to pick up steam throughout October as families prepare to celebrate. The major retailers will release sales updates in November when they report quarterly results.

However, seasonal items appear to be driving consumer spending.

Late September, Costco said on an earnings call that early sales of Halloween items were doing well, and Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said the company is stocking up on spooky items like inflatable boats and outdoor decor, even as it’s canceling other orders and dealing with a spate of unwanted ones becomes a fan shop.

According to Lowe’s Boltz, higher prices for groceries, rent and other essentials don’t seem to stop customers from spending.

“When you think of Halloween and you think of discretionary categories, it’s probably as discretionary as possible,” Lowe’s Boltz said. He noted that there was also a demand for more expensive Halloween items, such as the large lawn decorations.

Meanwhile, back in Dallas, Cislo is still deciding what new animatronic he will buy for his lawn. He also plans to get supplies and build a tunnel that trick-or-treaters have to go through to reach the porch and get their treat: a candy bar or a lollipop.

He said he wanted to create the kind of experience he enjoyed dressing up in costume and trick-or-treating as a kid in upstate New York. The best houses, he recalled, gave out full-size candy bars or had extra-spooky decorations.

“It wasn’t just, ‘The lights are on. Let’s ring the bell,'” he said.

Nobel Prize in Economics for US-based economists together with Bernanke

Ben Bernanke, former Federal Reserve Chairman, speaks during the annual meeting of the American Economic Association and Allied Social Science Association Friday, January 4, 2019. Bernanke is one of three winners of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Economics.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

US economists Ben Bernanke, Douglas Diamond and Philip Dybvig were awarded the 2022 Nobel Prize in Economics for their research on banks and financial crises.

Bernanke served as Chairman of the Federal Reserve from 2006 to 2014 and is now at the Brookings Institute in Washington, DC Diamond is a professor at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and Dybvig is a professor at Washington University’s Olin Business School in Washington St. Louis .

The Nobel Committee said their work in the early 1980s “greatly improved our understanding of the role of banks in the economy, especially during financial crises” and showed why it is important to avoid bank failures. They added this was “invaluable” during the 2008/09 financial crisis and the coronavirus pandemic.

Bernanke’s analysis of the Great Depression of the 1930s showed how and why bank runs were a major reason the crisis was so long and severe. Diamond and Dybvig’s work, meanwhile, addressed the societal important role banks play in mediating the potential conflict between savers who want access to their money and the economy, which needs savings to invest. and how governments can help prevent bank runs by offering deposit insurance and acting as lenders of last resort.

The winners of the prize – officially called the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel – will each receive 10 million Swedish kronor ($883,000).

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences selects the winners from a list of candidates recommended by the Economics Awards Committee. They make their selection from names submitted by invitation from around 3,000 professors, previous award winners and Academy members. People cannot nominate themselves.

Last year, the business prize was divided into three parts. He went to David Card for his work on labor economics; and Joshua D. Angrist and Guido W. Imbens for their contributions to causal analysis.

Unlike the five other Nobel Prizes awarded since 1901 and given in the will of Swedish inventor, chemist and engineer Alfred Nobel, the Economics Prize was established in 1969 by the Swedish Central Bank in his honor. It is the last to be announced each year.

The prestigious Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Belarusian human rights activist Ales Bialiatski, the Russian human rights organization Memorial and the Ukrainian NGO Center for Civil Liberties on Friday.

This year’s Physics Prize went to Alain Aspect, John Francis Clauser and Anton Zeilinger for discoveries in quantum mechanics. The Nobel Committee said it had conducted “groundbreaking experiments” studying particles in entangled states, ushering in a new era in quantum technology.

The chemistry award was split between Carolyn R. Bertozzi for her work using click and bioorthogonal chemistry to map cells and develop more targeted cancer treatments; and Morten Meldal and K. Barry Sharpless, who the committee said had “laid the foundations of click chemistry,” which involves joining biocompatible molecules together.

The medicine prize was awarded to Svante Paabo “for his discoveries on the genomes of extinct hominins and human evolution”.

The literary prize went to the French author Annie Ernaux.