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Knowledge@Wharton May 7, 2003 |
What Can Risk Management Do for You, Me and Argentina? Irrational Exuberance author and Yale economist Robert Shiller is back with another book, this time cautioning investors and non-investors to think long and hard about the broader risks they face in life. The New Financial Order is a bold plea.  |
U.S. Banker May 2003 Holly Sraeel |
Global Community? The World Can Only Hope. The free world is compelled to rebuild Iraq, complete with a democratic government, with the Iraqis for the Iraqis. It won't be cheap and, even more, it won't be easy.  |
U.S. Banker May 2003 Michael Dumiak |
The Brittle New Economy A mysterious Asian flu took hold and forecasts slid. But the catalyst could have been anything.  |
Inc. May 1, 2003 |
Free Free-Trade Trade wars can only hurt the U.S. and Europe.  |
IDB America April 2003 Daniel Drosdoff |
A region's rising prospects The Central American Bank for Economic Integration is growing apace with its members' economies  |
Knowledge@Wharton April 23, 2003 |
The Bush Tax Reform Plan: Greener Pastures vs. the Road to Perdition Robert J. Barro, an economics professor at Harvard University and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, took up the cudgels for President Bush's proposed $726 billion tax reform plan. On the other side of the ring was Alan S. Blinder, a Princeton University economics professor.  |
National Real Estate Investor April 23, 2003 Parke Chapman |
Fitch: Corporate debt took a hit in 2002 The corporate debt markets last year weathered the worst credit conditions in a decade, reports Fitch Ratings. A three-pronged storm was to blame as weak corporate profitability, heavy debt burdens and headline bankruptcies created an unprecedented amount of credit deterioration.  |
Registered Rep. April 21, 2003 Ross Tucker |
Optimism Among Wealthy Grows Good news for advisors looking to land affluent clients: Wealthy Americans are starting to regain confidence in future business and market conditions.  |
IndustryWeek May 1, 2003 John S. McClenahen |
The Next Crisis: Too Few Workers Even as the U.S. economy struggles to recover from recession and manufacturing firms continue to thin their ranks, there's still talk of a skills shortage. No kidding. Here's what the experts are saying and what you can do about it.  |
IndustryWeek April 9, 2003 John S. McClenahen |
Surprise: Manufacturing Business Outlook Index Expands In March But quarterly measure by Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI dips below December's five-year high.  |
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