All Economy
- Pension investing and developing countries
Institutional investors will turn to the developing world seeking higher returns but what are the risks of seeking those returns?
- Tech stocks bask in Facebook's glow
Tech stocks related to social media, like Groupon and Zynga, see shares rise after Facebook IPO. But boost for these tech stocks could be temporary.
- Facebook IPO: CEO is ruler. Can shareholders win?
Facebook IPO makes clear that CEO Zuckerberg dominates the company with more than half the board votes. But studies suggest that might benefit shareholders long after the Facebook IPO.
- Ron Paul's Fed chairman
For both Paul and Gingrich, Jim Grant would be an important player in federal finances.
- Mortgage rates: new record lows. Again.
Mortgage rates drop to 3.87 percent for a fixed 30-year loan; 15-year fixed mortgage rates fall to 3.14 percent. That's the lowest in more than a half century of data.
- Can Facebook IPO help solve a state budget crisis?
The Facebook IPO could bring California as much as $500 million in tax revenues from capital gains. Depending on whom you talk to, that's a significant help or a drop in the bucket.
- Why expiring tax cuts should actually expire
The charade of annual or biennial debate about perpetually “expiring” tax provisions is terrible tax policy and a symbol of our failure to come to terms with budget reality.
- Facebook IPO is good news for Zynga, Pandora, Groupon, too
The impending Facebook IPO has given a leg-up to social gaming powerhouse Zynga.
- 'Right to work' push has unions stewing and a fight brewing
A 'right to work' push in Minnesota leads to boycotts by Democratic lawmakers and protests in multiple states.
- Obama opens door to offshore wind power along mid-Atlantic coast
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced plans Thursday to open four new wind-leasing regions for wind farms along the mid-Atlantic coast. States look forward to a positive economic impact.
- What Mitt Romney's 'poor' gaffe really means
What Romney seems to have meant is that he believes the least-well-off are amply provided for by the safety net. Too bad he wants to shred it.
- Obama is no 'food stamp president'
Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich agree that President Obama is turning America into “European-style welfare culture,” pointing to a rise in the number of citizens relying on federal aid. Here's why they have it backwards.
- Romney actually wants to help 'poor people,' and the right isn't happy
Conservative pundits are ripping Mitt Romney over his stated willingness to fix the safety net for poor people who are 'falling through the cracks.' Why didn't he renounce dependency on government? they ask.
- Jobless claims drop by 12,000
“Initial” unemployment declined 12,000 to 367,000 claims from last week’s revised 379,000 claims, while “continued” claims declined by 130,000.
- Don't read the manual? It'll cost you.
The owners' manual is full of tiny useful facts that, taken together, will save you time and money.
- Is Ron Paul's gold standard idea dangerous?
Ron Paul wants to end the Fed and go back to the gold standard. Many call that a dangerous idea, but the US was quite prosperous on the gold standard.
- Facebook IPO: Could it backfire if users revolt?
The Facebook IPO will make some people very rich, but social-media experts suggest that it could force Facebook to put profits over user experience – and that could cause problems.
- Private employers add 170,000 jobs
The situation for private employment in the U.S. improved in January as private employers added 170,000 jobs in the month bringing the total employment level 1.77 percent above the level seen in January 2011.
- Mitt Romney's 'poor' choice of words: Who's really struggling in America?
Mitt Romney was in damage-control mode Wednesday after the multimillionaire candidate said he's 'not concerned about the very poor.' He said he's concerned about those who are 'struggling.'
- Obama plan to lower mortgage payments could help, but how much?
President Obama unveiled his plan to cut mortgage payments for 'responsible homeowners' in trouble. But the housing crisis is so massive that no one program can solve it, experts say.