All Economy
- Why Ryan's budget is music to Democrat's earsPaul Ryan may not have intended it, but his 2013 budget is the strongest argument I’ve seen for why any serious fiscal plan must include new revenues.
- Exxon Valdez bound for scrap heap in IndiaExxon Valdez: Best Oasis Ltd., an Indian company that buys old ships to dismantle them, and recycle salvageable material, bought the old old tanker. The Exxon Valdez was involved in one of the worst oil spills in US history.Â
- Loan forgiveness? Great, but beware the tax.Loan forgiveness is helping indebted Americans. But the amount of the loan forgiveness can be taxed by the IRS.
- Community resources are there to save you moneyCommunity parks and programs are an almost unlimited source of entertainment, at little to no cost.
- AT&T sued over calls for deafAT&T didn't put in procedures to prevent fraud by people using stolen credit cards on the Internet-based system, the Justice Department says. Its suit charges AT&T improperly billed the government as a result.
- Insider trading bill: A model to end gridlock on Congress?The Senate passed jobs and insider-trading bills Thursday, hailing a moment of bipartisanship. But times when members of Congress get along are rare – and that isn't expected to change.Â
- Sorry, Romney, it's no longer an Etch A Sketch worldThroughout his political career, Mitt Romney has relied on the ability to ignore past platforms and start fresh from campaign to campaign. But in the video age, the past is harder to erase.
- Stocks lower on worries about Chinese economyThe Dow slipped 78 points to close at 13046 amid signs that suggest the Chinese economy is weakening.
- Jobless claims drop lower and lowerInitial jobless claims declined to 348,000 claims from last week’s revised 353,000 claims, while continued claims declined by 9,000 resulting in an 'insured' unemployment rate of 2.6 percent
- Monitor BreakfastCEOs willing to give up tax breaks - if the rate is rightA group of CEOs is launching a two-week lobbying and media blitz on corporate taxes, keyed to the fact that on April 1, Japan will officially lower its corporate tax rate.
- Obama fast-tracks part of Keystone XL pipelineAfter rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline proposal in January, President Obama gives a green light to its southern leg – a bid to ease a key bottleneck to new oil supplies and defuse critics on gas prices.
- Existing home sales down in FebruarySingle family home sales declined 1.0 percent from January but rose 9.4 percent above the level seen in February 2011.
- National grocery chains to stop selling beef containing 'pink slime'Federal regulators say the filler, known in the industry as 'lean, finely textured beef,' meets food safety standards. But critics say the product could be unsafe and is an unappetizing example of industrialized food production.
- Britain's 'millionaire' budget eases taxes on the richBritain released its annual budget yesterday, which includes a tax cut for the country's biggest earners – but also eliminates taxes for Britain's lowest earners.Â
- Fiscal policy and the importance of word choiceIn economic policy debates, lawmakers have to be very careful about the language they choose.
- Iranian oil sanctions: US exempts 11 nationsThe American government will exempt 10 European countries plus Japan from financial sanctions due to their efforts to reduce their dependence on Iranian oil.
- Will Obama's budget raise or lower taxes? Both.Republicans call Obama an unrepentant tax raiser. The president calls himself a responsible tax cutter who only raises taxes on the rich. Both sides have a point.
- Jobless claims fall to four-year low as economy reboundsUnemployment assistance applications dropped to a seasonally adjusted 348,000, the lowest level since February 2008. The drop coincides with the best three months of hiring in two years
- Ryan's budget helps no one but the richThe real contrast in Paul Ryan's budget is over what the plan does for the rich and what it does to everyone else. It reduces the top individual and corporate tax rates to 25 percent. This would give the wealthiest Americans an average tax cut of at least $150,000 a year. The money would come out of programs for the elderly, lower-middle families, and the poor.
- Oil prices fall below $107 a barrelOil prices dip on concerns about China's growth. But oil prices are up from $75 a barrel in October.