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Released: 21-Jun-2010 12:30 PM EDT
Regulators Need More Funding to Enforce Finance Reform
Washington University in St. Louis

The U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representative are working toward a final version of the financial reform bill, which is expected be on the desk of President Barack Obama by July 4. Securities law expert Hillary A. Sale, JD, professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis, says that is coming at a good time for the Securities & Exchange Commission.

   
Released: 18-Jun-2010 3:00 PM EDT
Economics Expert Available to Discuss Oil Spill Fallout
Texas Tech University

A Texas Tech University expert says the economic impact is catastrophic and will have far-reaching effects that will likely transmit to the nation as a whole.

Released: 17-Jun-2010 3:00 PM EDT
Study Confirms Military Spending Helps States Survive Poor Economy
University of Alabama at Birmingham

States in which defense spending is high are better equipped to withstand the effects of an economic downturn than others, according to a new study led by University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Assistant Professor of Sociology Casey Borch, Ph.D.

Released: 14-Jun-2010 4:45 PM EDT
Staying Happy and Motivated in Your Job
Butler University

Unemployment is hovering near 10 percent — the highest in more than 26 years. That figure doesn’t include those involuntarily working part-time (one to 34 hours a week) or those who gave up looking for jobs for one reason or another and fell off the unemployment rolls. So even if you’d like the challenge of a new job, you may have to wait out this economic slump, says Butler University Executive-in-Residence Marv Recht.

Released: 10-Jun-2010 10:00 AM EDT
Is the Current Recession Compromising Hospital Quality?
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

During past recessions, the financial stability of hospitals seemed to be nearly indestructible. But researchers at the University of Michigan Health System and St. Joseph Mercy Health System say the current national economic crisis may be an exception.

Released: 9-Jun-2010 3:50 PM EDT
Entrepreneurship Professor Provides Advice to Determine an Idea's Entrepreneurial Merit
Iowa State University

Howard Van Auken, the Bob and Kay Smith Fellow in Entrepreneurship in Iowa State University's College of Business, provides advice to determine whether a good business idea has entrepreneurial merit.

Released: 7-Jun-2010 4:20 PM EDT
Tax Credit Helps Small Businesses Pay for Health Care
Butler University

Starting in April, millions of small businesses began to receive postcards from the Internal Revenue Service about the new Small Business Health Care Tax Credit. Even if your business hasn’t received a postcard, you may still be eligible for this credit designed to help small businesses and non-profit organizations that pay employee health insurance premiums in 2010, says Bill Terando, a professor of accounting at Butler University.

Released: 4-Jun-2010 9:00 AM EDT
‘Just-In-Time Hiring’ Good News for College Graduates Still Looking for Jobs
Wake Forest University

Because companies and organizations are making more “just-in-time” hiring decisions, the summer hiring season looks brighter for new college graduates who are still looking for a job.

Released: 4-Jun-2010 8:00 AM EDT
Former Federal Reserve Economist Tells Lawmakers to Slow Down
Wake Forest University

As lawmakers begin meeting next week to mull over legislation aimed at averting another financial crisis, a former Federal Reserve economist cautions that such sweeping reform could have serious unintended consequences. “This is very ambitious and hugely complicated legislation that is being done very fast,” says Robert Bliss, who is now a professor at Wake Forest University Schools of Business.

Released: 3-Jun-2010 7:00 AM EDT
Changing Economy Fuelling Anti-Feminist Backlash
Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences

A Windsor, Ont., researcher says the loss of traditional manufacturing jobs in Canada is fuelling a backlash against feminism.

Released: 2-Jun-2010 12:30 PM EDT
Sociological Study Reveals Corporate Financial Malfeasance
American Sociological Association (ASA)

The need to “fix” or restate financial statements is an admission by corporate management that these reports (prior to their being corrected) to the government and the investing public misrepresented the corporations’ financial positions, Texas A&M University sociology professor Harland Prechel reports in a research paper published in the June 2010 issue of the American Sociological Review (ASR).

Released: 2-Jun-2010 7:00 AM EDT
Survey Highlights Major Canada-U.S. Differences in People in Middle Age
Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences

Middle-aged Canadians are much less worried about the future than their American counterparts, some of whom are close to panic, says an Alberta researcher who has just finished a survey in both countries. And she says the differing attitudes today may foreshadow growing differences between the two countries as that cohort move into old age.

Released: 1-Jun-2010 4:00 AM EDT
Mid-America Business Conditions Index Highest Level in Four Years
Creighton University

The Business Conditions Index for the Mid-America region advanced for a sixth straight month, pointing to a growing economy in the months ahead, according to the May Business Conditions survey of supply managers in a nine-state region.

Released: 28-May-2010 1:35 PM EDT
Internships Take on New Meaning for Graduates and Corporations
Wake Forest University

With new college graduates facing one of the toughest job markets in years, internships are becoming one of the keys to getting hired in today’s economy. In many cases, universities consider internships so important that they are building endowments and offering stipends to fund students’ salaries, said Patrick Sullivan, associate director of experiential education at Wake Forest University.

Released: 27-May-2010 2:40 PM EDT
More B-Schools Need to Focus on Emerging Markets
American University

More business schools need to dedicate more attention to emerging markets as the sheer number of said markets, their projected growth, and distinct natures demand it.

Released: 26-May-2010 8:30 AM EDT
Study Reveals Regulatory Spending and Staffing at All-Time High
Washington University in St. Louis

Homeland security and other regulatory agencies are creating jobs and a record-breaking budget according to a new study from the Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government, and Public Policy at Washington University in St. Louis and the George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center. A Decade of Growth in the Regulators’ Budget: An Analysis of the U.S. Budget for Fiscal Years 2010 and 2011 details the rise in regulatory spending and who gets the lion's share of this year's $59 billion federal regulatory budget.

Released: 25-May-2010 8:40 AM EDT
Study Finds Insurance Is Not a "Systemic Risk"
Indiana State University

Research completed by an Indiana State University Networks Financial Institute fellow has concluded that systemic risk is not a feature of the insurance industry.

Released: 21-May-2010 1:00 PM EDT
Researchers Report 'Bleak' 2009 Residential Building Activity; Early 2010 Figures More Promising
University of Virginia

New data on residential building permits issued in Virginia, compiled by the University of Virginia's Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, paints a bleak picture of a housing industry hammered by the recession.

   
Released: 21-May-2010 1:00 PM EDT
Planning Professor's Book Sheds New Light on Foreclosures
University of Virginia

A new book by University of Virginia planning professor William Lucy looks more deeply at the reasons behind the foreclosure crisis and its future impact on cities and suburbs.

Released: 21-May-2010 10:55 AM EDT
Babson Executive Education Issues Report on Business Uncertainty: 2010 Global Survey Results
Babson College

Business leaders around the world are more focused today than ever before on managing risk and uncertainty within their organizations. According to new research released this week by Babson Executive Education (BEE)—The Report on Business Uncertainty: 2010 Survey Results— almost half of 1,048 global executives surveyed said they are taking bolder actions than before 2008 when the global economy tumbled.

Released: 20-May-2010 11:00 AM EDT
Litter Study Shows Chicago Misses 75 Percent of Cigarette Taxes
University of Illinois Chicago

A random sample of littered cigarette packs reveals that 75 percent of the cigarettes used in Chicago bring no tax revenue to the city, according to researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Released: 14-May-2010 4:45 PM EDT
As College Graduates Hit the Workforce, So Do More Entitlement-Minded Workers
University of New Hampshire

As thousands of Generation Y college graduates flood the workforce this spring, the nation’s employers may want to brace themselves for a new crop of entitlement-minded workers.

Released: 14-May-2010 12:00 PM EDT
Senior Class Gift Eases Debt Burden for Freshmen
Wake Forest University

According to the Higher Education Research Institute, more first-year college students have concerns about their ability to pay for college than at any time in the last 40 years. At Wake Forest University, graduating seniors are responding to this anxiety.

Released: 6-May-2010 10:20 AM EDT
Benefits Matter in Agriculture Job Displacement
North Carolina State University

A North Carolina State University study shows that out-of-work agricultural laborers from small farms that do not provide unemployment insurance spend fewer weeks unemployed and then earn less than other workers when rehired.

Released: 6-May-2010 8:00 AM EDT
Households Overreached, Led to Foreclosure Crisis
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

During the 2007-2008 foreclosure crisis, did banks prey on unwitting consumers, or did households overreach and borrow more than they could afford? A new study by University of Arkansas economists suggests the latter. The researchers found that most households in foreclosure were relatively affluent and highly educated people, with few or no children, living in geographical areas that experienced extremely rapid real-estate appreciation – the housing bubble.

Released: 4-May-2010 2:00 PM EDT
Oil Spill Experts At The Florida State University
Florida State University

Officials say it may take up to three months to seal off a leaking oil well 5,000 feet below the surface of the Gulf of Mexico that has created a massive environmental crisis that could affect much of the Gulf coast. The Florida State University, which is leading a statewide Oil Spill Academic Task Force to assist the Gulf region in preparing for and responding to the oil spill, is home to some of the nation’s top experts in measuring and modeling the magnitude and trajectory of the spill, providing information on the potential and actual ecological impacts of the oil and evaluating risks associated with the spill. The spill followed an explosion on April 20.

Released: 4-May-2010 11:00 AM EDT
Declining Social Security Benefits Keep Older Men in Workforce
Ohio State University

The decline in the generosity of Social Security benefits for workers who recently reached their 60s has been the leading cause of the trend toward delayed retirement of older men, a new national study suggests.

Released: 3-May-2010 3:00 PM EDT
Greek Debt Crisis is Potential ‘Contagion’ for Global Financial Markets: Cornell Expert
Cornell University

The current Greek debt crisis looks to be a classic case of potential 'contagion' in global financial markets. Things can turn more ominous, however, when speculators in the financial markets begin betting en masse against a country like Greece, for in these cases the fears of some investors can become self-fulfilling prophecies.

   
Released: 29-Apr-2010 1:05 PM EDT
Savings Accounts in Child’s Name Provide Lifelong Benefits
Washington University in St. Louis

“There is evidence that when there are savings and assets in the household – particularly savings in a child’s name – that children have greater educational attainment, are more likely to do well in high school, attend college and graduate from college,” says Michael Sherraden, PhD, the Benjamin E. Youngdahl Professor of Social Development at Washington University in St. Louis. Sherraden, who recently was named to TIME Magazine’s Time 100, directs the Center for Social Development, which focuses much of its research on asset building.

Released: 29-Apr-2010 10:00 AM EDT
National Poll Finds African-American Teens More Optimistic About Future than Whites
Hamilton College

A new national survey of high school students’ attitudes toward the U.S. economy, conducted by Hamilton College, shows more than two-thirds of African-American teenagers believe they’ll be more prosperous than their parents. In contrast, a little more than a third of white students believe their standard of living will be better than their parents.

Released: 27-Apr-2010 5:00 PM EDT
New Rules, Grads: Job Search, THEN Diploma
Butler University

In today’s tight job market, new college graduates will typically spend up to 24 months seeking employment, says Butler University’s Director of Internship and Career Services Gary Beaulieu. “You can’t wait until two weeks before graduation to start looking,” he said. “You’ve got to start early and be very organized in your job search.”

Released: 20-Apr-2010 2:50 PM EDT
Experts Available to Share Job Seeking Tips for New and Recent Graduates
University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin)

Faculty and staff experts at The University of Texas at Austin are available to share their insight on job-seeking strategies for new graduates, the role of social media in job seeking, trends in campus recruiting, the link between education and a career, how to be indispensable at work and how new graduates should negotiate their first salary.

Released: 20-Apr-2010 2:15 PM EDT
SEC Case Against Goldman Sachs ‘Is Not a Slam Dunk’
Cornell University

Charles K. Whitehead, Associate Professor at the Cornell University School of Law and former associate in a law firm representing Goldman Sachs, comments on the strength of SEC charges of fraud in a civil complaint against Goldman Sachs.

Released: 19-Apr-2010 5:05 PM EDT
Recession Illustrates the Need for Public Assistance, Says Expert
Cornell University

Thomas Hirschl, professor of Development Sociology at Cornell University, comments about the widespread reliance on food stamps, Medicaid, reduced school lunches and other forms of public assistance.

Released: 15-Apr-2010 4:15 PM EDT
Survey: Improving Economy Lessens Debt Stress for Americans
Ohio State University

In another encouraging economic sign, a national survey showed that American consumers felt less stress in March than they did in February about the amount of debt they owed.

Released: 14-Apr-2010 7:00 AM EDT
Computer-Driven High Speed Trading Improves Market Liquidity
University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business

Responding to concerns about an increasingly electronic stock exchange, Terrence Hendershott studied algorithmic trading and found that computer-driven trading based on algorithmic formulas does, in fact, improve the market’s liquidity. Furthermore, this kind of high speed trading allows stock prices to become more “efficient” or reflective of true supply and demand in the market.

Released: 12-Apr-2010 7:00 AM EDT
Economists Unveil New Way to View Financial Markets
University of New Hampshire

Two economists offer a new way to look at financial markets that recognizes that the rational market is a myth – in the strictest sense of the word: it is a widely held but false belief. It cannot be turned into reality by any means, including regulatory policy, no matter how wise or efficacious. The reason is simple: assets’ underlying values unfold over time in non-routine ways that no one can fully foresee.

Released: 7-Apr-2010 12:10 PM EDT
Wage Theft Widespread in Cook County
University of Illinois Chicago

Low-wage workers in Cook County lose $7.3 million each week in at least a dozen industries through violations of minimum wage and overtime laws, says a study by researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Released: 6-Apr-2010 3:45 PM EDT
Tax Experts Available as Filing Deadline Looms
Texas Tech University

Financial planning experts can provide tips and commentary for avoiding filing headaches.

Released: 6-Apr-2010 12:15 PM EDT
Book Explains Americans' Discomfort with Ruins
University of Iowa

The economic crisis has produced at least one bumper crop: a growing number of damaged, decaying and abandoned homes, businesses and office buildings across the country’s landscape. But a University of Iowa professor notes in his new book that blight dates back to a much earlier point in history. In "Untimely Ruins," published by the University of Chicago Press, Nick Yablon writes that American ruins were a symbol of the country’s economic volatility throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.

Released: 6-Apr-2010 10:30 AM EDT
TARP Payback, Profit Was Expected, Says Expert
Cornell University

Steven C. Kyle, Cornell University associate professor of Applied Economics and Management, comments on reports that the Treasury Department is already earning an 8.5 percent profit on its investments in bailed out banks.

Released: 5-Apr-2010 1:00 PM EDT
Chicago Draws Biotech Community for the Future of Innovation
Association of University Research Parks (AURP)

Recognized as an emerging leader in innovation, the University Technology Park at IIT will host the Association of University Research Parks (AURP) BioParks 2010: No Boundaries to Innovation in Chicago April 30th-May 1st. The event will draw international research park leaders for networking, premier education and the latest innovation updates.

Released: 1-Apr-2010 3:55 PM EDT
State and Local Government Finance Focus of Weidenbaum Center Conference
Washington University in St. Louis

The Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government and Public Policy and the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis will host a daylong conference titled “State and Local Government Finance amid Economic Turbulence” beginning at 8 a.m. Friday, April 9, in Simon Hall's May Auditorium. The conference is free and open to the public, but registration is required.

Released: 31-Mar-2010 1:00 PM EDT
Bringing $6.3 Billion Into Kentucky's Economy
University of Kentucky

University of Kentucky College of Medicine alumni, 2,730 in total, are currently practicing across the Commonwealth, generating $6.3 billion annually into Kentucky’s economy and creating at least 49,140 jobs, according to UK’s Office of Health Research and Development.

Released: 31-Mar-2010 9:00 AM EDT
Angel Investor Market Holds Steady in 2009 But Changes Seen in Types of Deals
University of New Hampshire

On the heels of a considerable contraction in investment dollars in 2008, the 2009 angel investor market exhibited a modest decrease in investment dollars but little change in the number of investments, while significant changes occurred in the critical seed and start-up stages, according to the 2009 Angel Market Analysis released by the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire.

Released: 26-Mar-2010 10:25 AM EDT
Greener Resume Can Give College Graduates Edge in Job Market
Wake Forest University

Green-collar jobs grew by more than 9 percent, twice the growth rate for traditional jobs, from 1998 to 2007. Even during a recession, a greener resume can be the answer to getting hired, says Wake Forest Director of Sustainability Dedee DeLongpre Johnston.

Released: 26-Mar-2010 9:00 AM EDT
Tough Job Market Can Mean Good News for New College Graduates
Wake Forest University

Although this year’s cohort of college graduates is facing one of the toughest job markets in decades, they actually have an advantage over other job seekers, according to Andy Chan, vice president of career development at Wake Forest University. They are among the age group most likely to be hired and also will be acquiring valuable job hunting skills that will serve them well in the future.

Released: 24-Mar-2010 3:00 PM EDT
Entrepreneurs Beating the Odds
University of Virginia Darden School of Business

A cadre of entrepreneurs has built stable, even thriving firms often overlooked by outsiders who can’t see past the general sluggishness of the communities these firms call home. That’s about to change.

Released: 24-Mar-2010 2:05 PM EDT
Professor Offers Tips on Saving Money with New Tax Credits and Deductions
Butler University

To save money on your taxes this year, you’ll need to know the new deductions and tax credits included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.



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