The Stock-Buyback Swindle
American corporations are spending trillions of dollars to repurchase their own stock. The practice is enriching CEOs—at the expense of everyone else.
American corporations are spending trillions of dollars to repurchase their own stock. The practice is enriching CEOs—at the expense of everyone else.
No one has done more to dispel the myth of social mobility than Raj Chetty. But he has a plan to make equality of opportunity a reality.
His tariffs are contributing to a “generational shift” in which companies make their products.
These days, it seems, just about all organizations are asking their employees to do more with less. Is that actually a good idea?
For 30 years, we’ve trusted human-resources departments to prevent and address workplace sexual harassment. How’s that working out?
Here’s how to make the most of it.
The twisted logic behind hiring a hit man
The strange psychology of why so many people fail to notice obviously counterfeit money
Credentialed authorities are comically bad at predicting the future. But reliable forecasting is possible.
There are three things that give the seemingly unstoppable contestant an advantage—and this isn’t the first time he’s succeeded on a game show.
“James’s performance, I’m sure, is causing grief for an accountant somewhere.”
Investors are using real-time satellite images to predict retailers’ sales. Is that cheating?
Why pickpockets love our digitally distracted age
A brief history of the president’s unfulfilled architectural dreams
Strange things can happen when a business is based on millions of people flying around in $100 million metal boxes that can take a year to build.
Will the rest of America learn to love it too?
The weirdly hopeful story of how the U.S. came to be a leader in tax compliance
As the line between work and home blurs, office supplies attract sticky fingers.
In the car of the future, you may care more about how the driver’s seat swivels than how the engine purrs.
Why the news is going back to the 19th century