One of the world’s foremost economists suggests which catalysts propelled India out of desperate poverty – and predicts how the subcontinent will turn its sprint into a marathon.
On Friday November 11th, 2016 the Real Estate Association (REA) and members of the Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate toured Flushing Commons, a mixed-use development site with residential condominiums, office space, parking, and an open-air public plaza including outdoor restaurants and shops.
In a surprise move to strangle its shadow economy, India has canceled its two largest bills, prompting major shifts in the world’s third-largest economy.
Given the fast pace of technological advancement and globalization, how can governments, businesses, and workers adapt and ensure that enough jobs remain?
A closer look at the company’s 2014 IPO reveals technicalities that give Jack Ma & Co. total control. Wei Jiang, the Arthur F. Burns Professor of Free and Competitive Enterprise and a Chazen Senior Scholar, opens the books.
America regularly holds the longest political contests of any democracy, but there’s little evidence that a lengthy consideration period leads to better choices.
There’ve been tremendous strides in terms of acceptance of LGBTQ people both in the world and the workplace in just the past few years, Fred Hochberg ’75, chairman of the Export-Import Bank explains, but there’s still a ways to go.