The debate created by Thiel’s IRA raises an important question: Are enormous retirement accounts a problem, and should we legislate to prevent future supersized IRAs? They are not, in fact, a problem, and proposals to prevent such a thing from happening again will likely reduce savings elsewhere.
Sadly, voters aren’t demanding more, and so next month’s election will be about attrition: the winner will be the candidate that can get more voters to show up and vote than the other. Solutions? Don’t expect any in the near future.
Business runs on data but legal is, unsurprisingly, lagging. Here's how the legal function can harness the power of data to streamline how it delivers its products and services, practices, and collaborates with business to create value and enhance customer experience.
The World Bank, World Trade Organization, and World Health Organization look like they are falling down on the job, but maybe it's the members that are to blame. It might be time to consider new ways of reaching our goals.
Attorney General Merrick Garland is worth an estimated $20 million, tied with Janet Yellen at the top of our tally of Biden’s richest cabinet secretaries.
Alphabet Inc.’s autonomous driving company is thinking about what the world will throw at its trucks “with a level of thoroughness that’s bordering on paranoia.”
Eviction, displacement, gentrification are all terms being used to push for policies that make producing and operating housing more risky and expensive; we simply need more housing of all kinds everywhere for people of all levels of income.
The world’s largest electronics manufacturer is paying $280 million, including $50 million of stock in Lordstown Motors for its sprawling Ohio factory.
Lawmakers like Senator Joe Manchin can be expected to oppose carbon taxes and cap & trade schemes given the state he represents. But there are also many Democratic lawmakers, even those from deep blue states, who don’t want to vote on a national carbon tax.
President Biden’s White House, Congress, the federal executive agencies, all 50 states, and at least 80,000 local units of government are legally required to provide their payroll information.