Nearly seven weeks into the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster, the Obama administration is facing increasing calls to take over the cleanup operation from beleaguered oil giant BP.
When the White House first got wind of the executive bonuses at American International Group, the disbelief was palpable.
As President-elect Barack Obama continues to push for quick action on a large-scale economic stimulus program, top Democrats on Wednesday said Congress must pass the bill by mid-February.
There's an elephant in the room every time Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson steps to a podium to recount the serial emergency actions he and other top officials have taken (and, as revealed Monday, will continue to take) to prop up, bail out, jerry-rig, bolster, stabilize, or otherwise rescue capitalists and property owners.
Unemployment could reach 8% in 2009, economists say
Admit it. you want to see some justice handed out on Wall Street. Thanks to the Great Mortgage Panic of 2008, your home value is tumbling, credit is harder to get and the job market may turn a lot tougher. And let's not even talk about your 401(k) balance.
CNN Deputy Political Director Paul Steinhauser has all the latest details on what's happening on the campaign trail.
Sen. Barack Obama received key endorsements Friday from a top former Clinton administration official and two former Democratic senators.
Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich warned Americans on Wednesday not to be overly optimistic that the U.S. economy might rebound by the end of summer.
Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich discusses the state of the economy.
Back in 1996, around the time Bill Clinton was cruising toward reelection against Bob Dole, I had a conversation with Labor Secretary Robert Reich about the pathetic state of America's unions. Reic...
Have an economist you want to embarrass? Ask him why the U.S. economy is doing so well.
The headline happened to appear in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch recently, but you hear the sentiment everywhere: WALL STREET'S MERGER MANIA AFFECTS MANY ON MAIN STREET; SHAREHOLDERS WIN, BUT WORKERS...
Take the popular cartoon Dilbert, pump it up on steroids, multiply it by about a million, and you begin to approach what it's like to work in Washington. It's a warped, wacky world, as portrayed by...
Once when I was working on a story about a company facing a horrendous legal problem, I went to see the general counsel. I arrived on time for the interview, but he was nowhere to be found. When he...
Picture this. Ten-year-old children get up before dawn every morning and go to work. They are paid by the piece, not by a guaranteed hourly wage. They get no benefits. And they work seven days a we...
Readers responded with enthusiasm to our March coverage of the American workplace. They were intrigued by "You Can Make Six Figures Working at Home" and fired up by In Your Interest, which advised ...
Fortune: LIVING WITH LAYOFFSupdated: Mon Apr 01 1996 00:01:00
IN NEARLY 40 years, no person employed on a regular basis by IBM has lost as much as one hour of working time because of a layoff. When recessions come or there is a major product shift, some compa...
STARTING IN MID-SEPTEMBER, AN ESTImated 4 million employees and retired workers at 1,500 large companies--including Northwest Airlines and Westinghouse--will get an unsettling letter from their emp...
Fortune: NOW HEAR THIS updated: Mon Oct 03 1994 00:01:00
-- SERGEI MAVRODI, 39, president of MMM, the Russian mutual fund accused of defrauding millions of investors in a pyramid scheme, in an open letter published by Russian newspapers: "I personally ev...
WHAT will it take to provide workers with the attitudes and technical skills they need for the new economy? Schools that are linked with employers to integrate classroom instruction with practical ...
"Job security is a thing of the past. People are going to have to get used to the idea of involuntary separations -- sometimes four, five or six times during a career." Those cold-sounding words co...
Looking for work when you're over 50 can make you feel like you're Heidi Fleiss trying to sign on as a Girl Scout leader. Just look at the obstacles you face: There's resistance to paying higher sa...
LIKE IT OR NOT, all of us are largely defined, at least in the eyes of others, according to an elaborate set of criteria -- how much we earn, what we do for a living, who our parents are, where and...
Fortune: AMERICA'S BEST?updated: Mon Feb 07 1994 00:01:00
If you harbor any doubt that a global view contributes to business success, consider this remarkable fact: Four of America's ten most admired companies are run by immigrant CEOs. J.P. Morgan's Denn...
Dear Morningliner: On a recent visit to Las Vegas, I felt the need for some inspirational literature, like The Power of Positive Thinking , by the late Norman Vincent Peale, but the Gamblers Book S...
Friends, it is time. Once again we reach for the envelopes and announce the ten most notorious businesspersons of the year. As usual, relative notoriety is gauged by the number of articles in the N...
Chicago -- Hooters, a national restaurant chain which has achieved notoriety for its scantily clad waitresses, has been accused of sexual discrimination by a man who claims the company refused to h...
When Andy Hansen brought home a report card with a disappointing C in math, his parents didn't ground him or send him to a tutor. They sued his teacher. On Friday, after a year and six different ap...
A CEO we know has disgustedly passed along a note he and others received from the OAW -- the Labor Department's Office of the American Workplace. The OAW serves as a handy backdrop for Labor Secret...
Can anything be done to reverse the long slide of America's unions? The answer frequently given around here is ''no, fortunately,'' but the Clintonites obviously mean to try. The emerging official ...
Is the Secretary of Labor warming to the idea of a mandatory raise? That's the gist of a recent memo Robert Reich sent to the President proposing that the Labor Department study a plan to increase ...
You gotta watch those guys every minute. Just when it seems as though something useful, or at least harmless, is coming out of this Administration, one looks more closely and -- they've done it aga...
By standards commonly invoked in the past, American labor relations would seem ; to be remarkably serene. Strike activity is at a post-World War II low: In the latest 12-month period, only about 1/...
Will the Clinton Administration make good on its campaign promise to impose a 1.5% payroll tax on companies with more than 50 workers that don't spend at % least that much on training? Not necessar...
WE STILL CAN'T be sure exactly what Bill Clinton meant when he promised the country change. But at least we now know who his change agents will be. His choices point to an Administration that will ...
LAWRENCE BOSSIDY, CEO of Allied-Signal, predicts ''organizational revolution'' for corporate America. Says David Nadler, president of Delta Consulting Group, who works with the chiefs of AT&T, Corn...
Across the land, up hill and down dale, the people are coming out for industrial policy. As previously and derisively noted in this space, Paul Tsongas is for it. Ross Perot seems to be for it. (He...
''For Middle Americans, the American Dream is vanishing.'' -- Robert Reich, Harvard lecturer
COMPETITIVENESS 12 THE NEW AMERICAN CENTURY: WHERE WE STAND Will the U.S. star in the next century or will Japan and Europe command the stage? FORTUNE gives American competitiveness an encouraging,...
| In a series of interesting and successful books about economic affairs, Robert B. Reich has established himself as the leading liberal political economist, succeeding his retired Harvard colleagu...
If a new world is indeed to be born in the aftermath of the Cold War, the midwives will be business leaders. So, at least, argues Paul Saffo of the Institute for the Future, a research outfit in Me...
WHEN JAPANESE electronics giant Matsushita agreed to buy Hollywood stalwart MCA last month for almost $7 billion, it was the largest purchase ever of a U.S. company by a Japanese outfit. But it als...
ONE TENET of women's liberation was that the movement would liberate men too. Straitjacketed executives could share the burden of breadwinning with their wives, peel off those pin stripes, and work...
IT'S HARD TO SPOT Vice President George Bush without an economist at hand. The Yale Phi Beta Kappa in economics figures that distinguished conservative thinkers can help him convey an upbeat econom...
THE BIG AMERICAN corporation is in wrenching transformation, affected by elemental forces rushing upon it from a powerful array -- global competition, technological change, highly mobile financing,...
Near midnight on a cool Tuesday evening in May, Lester Thurow, American economist, slumps before a dish of German chocolate ice cream at Steve's ice cream parlor in Lexington, Mass. Breakfast that ...
Harvard's Robert B. Reich is a much admired economist, often stated to be (a) a deep and original thinker and (b) an idea man for various Democratic politicians. His latest work, Tales of a New Ame...
WASHINGTON reverberates these days with the sounds of construction. Some crews are putting the final touches on the restored Willard Hotel. Others are building a pedestrian mall between the White H...