Chief Economist on Talent and the Economy
"Our recovery may take years," the economist concluded over our last cup of coffee, "But smart people who work hard will always find a place." Talent will as always, he believes, find a home.
"Our recovery may take years," the economist concluded over our last cup of coffee, "But smart people who work hard will always find a place." Talent will as always, he believes, find a home.
Wall Street Journal | Robert J. Barro | Posted 04.04.2009 | Business
Central questions these days are how severe will the U.S. economic downturn be and how long will it last? The most serious concern is that the downtu...
Arthur Rosenfeld | Posted 03.28.2009 | World
The Chinese hold our debt and buy our real estate and in return we buy their manufactured goods. Perhaps we could bring some Chinese wisdom and savvy over too, just to balance the beam.
Iris Erlingsdottir | Posted 03.28.2009 | World
It is hard to see how we will be able to maintain a middle-class standard of living if there is a severe global downturn.
Warren Holstein | Posted 03.27.2009 | Comedy
Following in the footsteps of Franklin Roosevelt, many states are now advocating an end to what many boozers and businessmen alike deem antiquated puritanical pap. The Christian Right is not amused.
Robert S. McElvaine | Posted 03.26.2009 | Politics
President Obama's motivation in reading a sampling of the letters from the public is essentially the same as Roosevelt's was: "to help get him outside of the bubble."
AP | EILEEN AJ CONNELLY | Posted 03.23.2009 | Business
NEW YORK — "Even the experts don't quite know what's going on." Speaking to a number of those experts Friday, Paul Volcker, a top economic advi...
Martin Lewis | Posted 03.23.2009 | Entertainment
Perhaps we can celebrate in the same spirit that inhabited that first Oscars at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in May 1929, just 5 months before the whole world slid into the economic abyss.
Craig Crawford | Posted 03.09.2009 | Politics
The songs and movies of the 1930's had a unifying effect on the country during the Great Depression. I want to see your contributions about today's crisis.
Paul Abrams | Posted 03.08.2009 | Politics
By shifting the debate from wishful thinking to sound economics, prospects rise for effective policy decisions now and in the future, and doing the debate right is as important as the policy itself.
Ronald B. Robinson | Posted 03.08.2009 | Politics
Does the Republican ploy to provide 4% home mortgages to boost the economy sound too good to be true? It is. Buyer Beware!
Ismael Hossein-zadeh | Posted 03.05.2009 | Politics
If "illiquidity is the core economic problem," as policy makers argue, why is then the government's injection of enormous amounts of liquidity failing to unfreeze the credit market?
Michael B. Laskoff | Posted 03.05.2009 | Business
After death and divorce, the most likely source of grief for most people is caused by unemployment. You can survive if you follow the old military adage: "Embrace the suck."
Carl Sferrazza Anthony | Posted 03.02.2009 | Politics
As memories of Inauguration Day 2009 begin to fade in and the new administration ensues, speculation will only increase about how politically influential Michelle Obama will be as First Lady.
McClatchy Washington Bureau | David Lightman | Posted 02.27.2009 | Politics
The nation's current recession is likely to be the longest since World War II, and by some measures could be the worst since the Great Depression, a n...
Amy L. Fairchild, Ph.D. and Ronald Bayer, Ph.D. | Posted 02.27.2009 | Politics
Like the provision of medical care to the ill, an effective health system -- which keeps children and adults from becoming sick in the first place -- depends on both vision and commitment.
The Guardian | Julia Finch With Additional Reporting by Andrew Clarke and David Teather | Posted 02.25.2009 | Business
The worst economic turmoil since the Great Depression is not a natural phenomenon but a man-made disaster in which we all played a part. In the second...
John Standerfer | Posted 02.23.2009 | Business
What we don't appear to understand yet is that no amount of money, time or regulation can possibly resolve this problem while a few banks continue to hold the entire nation hostage.
Tom Engelhardt | Posted 02.20.2009 | Politics
We don't know what the world holds for us in the Obama years, but it's not likely to be pretty.
Terry Leach | Posted 02.20.2009 | Business
I wonder if Captain "Sully" Sullenberger's colleagues' pensions are secure. Somehow, I doubt it. Although airlines were the companies we used to loved to hate, airline employees are part of the family, too.
Leo W. Gerard | Posted 02.18.2009 | Politics
Lincoln's preservation of the union would not have been possible without his economic reform. It is the philosophy at the base of those achievements that must be the prototype for change in America now.
Hoyt Hilsman | Posted 02.18.2009 | Politics
One significant difference between the Roosevelt transition and that of Barack Obama is the swiftness with which the Obama transition team has moved to address the nation's economic crisis.
Stephen Herrington | Posted 02.13.2009 | Living
Back then a typical Republican was to the left of the Clintons. Nixon was a transition. It took Reagan to really define the world in which we now live, in which merit is no longer of value.
Eric Ehrmann | Posted 02.13.2009 | World
In Brazil as in the US, culture plays a big role in how nations survive the slump. Known for beaches, beauties, rain forest and laid back music, Brazil's national motto is "Order and Progress."
Liz Neumark | Posted 02.09.2009 | Business
It is a strange new world. I have been through several recessions and nothing even comes close to the vibe we are feeling today.
Jim Luce | Posted 04.09.2009 | Business