Louise Story

The World

Billionaires pledge to give up half their money to charity

More than 30 billionaires have agreed to donate at least half their fortunes to charity; the list was made public yesterday. The New York Times’ Louise Story, has the details of this new venture by some of the country’s richest people.

The World

War Bonds, Congress’ Declaration of War, Americans on the War

The World

Kaplan Accused of Discriminatory Hiring Practices with Credit Checks

The World

Rating vs. Resume: Can Bad Credit Kill Your Job Prospects?

The World

US hints at frustration with Chinese monetary policy

The World

Government considers next moves for Fannie and Freddie

Global Politics

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner convenes a meeting of mortgage analysts and economists today to discuss the future of mortgage financing. Is home ownership still a social good? And how much should the government put on the line to encourage it?

The World

Markets take hit as jobless claims rise

Financial markets took a hit yesterday after jobless claims rose to their highest level since last November. This increase is feeding concern that the economy is starting to slow down again. Louise Story joins us.

The World

Unemployment drops layoffs rise

New York Times finance reporter, Louise Story, breaks down the numbers. Louise reminds us that 8 milllion jobs have been lost since 2007 and that a real recovery will take years. She also looks at the effects of these numbers on the markets.

Local officials find difficulties in evaluating effectiveness of business tax incentives

States are competing against each other with tax incentives in the battle for jobs. But once incentives are given out, some are finding it impossible to determine whether they’re getting any return on their investment.

Investigation finds SEC regularly exempting Wall Street banks from fraud penalties

In an investigation by The New York Times, reporters discovered that the SEC is regularly declaring that the strictest penalties for fraud, penalties it regularly imposes on other businesses, often are not imposed on Wall Street investment banks.