Articles
Goldman Sachs Bonuses Double Due to Bailout
By Paul SmaleraPosted Sunday, November 8, 2009 - 3:05amThe issue of health care reform took a huge step yesterday, with the House of Representatives voting to pass the plan reported out of committee by Democratic lawmakers. Nearly one out of five dollars nationwide is spent on health care; it’s one of the few industries in America experiencing both employment and fiscal growth, and yet millions of Americans aren’t covered under any provision of the current system.
Profit Not Satanic, Says Wealthy Banker
By Paul SmaleraPosted Saturday, November 7, 2009 - 3:22amThe moment everyone expected but no one was waiting for has arrived: Unemployment is in the double-digits. The New York Times says that 10.2 percent is a 26-year high in the 60-year history of government record-keeping. Only 1982, when 10.8 percent of workers were sidelined, was worse. Dampening the bad news, President Obama signed an extension of unemployment benefits for the jobless, allowing them to spend nearly two full years on the dole.
No Goodwill for Hummers
By Matthew DeBordPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 6:52pmOver at the New York Times Magazine, “Consumed” columnist Rob Walker has seen a Hummer— the large and often derided, military-derived General Motors SUV that will soon be sold as a brand to the Chinese—in the parking lot of a Goodwill and “smirked.” The implication is that the Hummer owner painted himself (and it’s probably a him) into a financial corner through his purchase of a pricey, gas-
Wonk Watch 11.06.09
By Matthew McKnightPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 5:16pmFelix Salmon came back earlier this week and has dived right back into parsing the turmoil. Today he addressed the rising unemployment rate—which, as we've learned, is at 10.2 percent, its peak since 1983. Salmon takes the time to draw out the implications of such high unemployment and comes to a rather depressing conclusion.
Word of the Week
By Caitlin McDevittPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 5:09pmThe Securities and Exchange Commission has been busy recently looking into all sorts of sneaky-sounding market practices that may be giving some traders unfair advantages over others. This week, SEC Commissioner Elisse Walter told Reuters that she’s increasingly concerned about "sponsored naked access."
Eric Schmidt's Burning Question
By Chris ThompsonPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 3:52pmMore goodies from Ken Auletta's new book Googled. When Eric Schmidt applied for the CEO gig, Larry Page and Sergey Brin weren't exactly thrilled to see him.
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Money Trail: Where markets meet ideas.
By Mark GimeinPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 2:32pmFor several years now, two very smart people—Nobel Prize-winning economist Gary Becker and polymath jurist Richard Posner—have written a blog together in which they debate the economic and legal issues of the day.
The Doughnut That Dare Not Speak Its Name
By Dan MitchellPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 1:23pmIt's a bad sign when the product you're selling is so awful that you can't bring yourself to name it.
Toyota Weeps
By Matthew DeBordPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 12:48pmA number of commentators have wondered why Tadashi Yamashina, who runs the Formula One racing effort for Toyota, became so emotional a few days ago when he announced that Toyota would be pulling out of the world’s premier racing organization. Obviously, this was a blow to Toyota’s high-performance pretenses, coming awkwardly on the heels of its debut of a $400,000 Lexus supercar at the Tokyo Motor Show.
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Moneybox: Commentary about business and finance.By Daniel GrossPosted Friday, November 6, 2009 - 11:47am
A once-endangered species is staging a robust comeback: the deficit hawk. Hunted nearly to death during the Bush years, many varieties not seen in Washington in a decade are now perching on branches and dropping their wisdom. Look, there's the puff-chested congressional peacock hawk, frequently seen strutting about Sunday-morning-TV-show sets complaining about pork while emitting loud honks on the receipt of stimulus funds.