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Where are the jobs? Ask the patent trolls.
President Obama has been touting patents as a way to create jobs and increase U.S. competitiveness. “These are jobs and businesses of the future just waiting to be created,” he said of patent applications last September, “somewhere in that stack of applications could be the next technological breakthrough, the next miracle drug, the next idea that will launch the next Fortune 500 company.” Washington Post
Submitted 10 days ago

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Can America Quit Football?
Did football contribute to Junior Seau's apparent suicide? Following Seau's death from a reportedly self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest Wednesday, speculation ran rampant that the popular retired NFL linebacker's seeming decision to kill himself may be linked to head trauma stemming from the sport—as was the case with Dave Duerson, a 50-year-old former NFL safety who shot himself fatally in the chest last year and subsequently was discovered to be suffering from the same degenerative brain disease found in 20 other deceased players. The Atlantic
Submitted 10 days ago

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My Southern perspective: Like mom says: Take it, it's good for you
Our lingering recession is like the memory of my mother standing over me with a bottle of castor oil in one hand and a spoon in the other: “Take it, it’s good for you.” Despite the disagreeable aspects of a recession, having one from time to time is not only good for the economy, it is necessary. History tells us we have had more than 20 recessions and a major depression since our country was founded. One thing we have learned from studying the U.S. economy is that it grows in stair steps. We move along rapidly for a decade or more, then we stall out and worry about whether or not our capitalistic system will right itself. Independent Mail
Submitted 10 days ago

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Zillow: South Florida Housing Market Has Hit Bottom
After six years of historic price declines, South Florida's housing market has hit bottom. So says Zillow.com, a Seattle-based real estate website that reports home values aren't just stable but rising in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties. Prices in South Florida reached their low point at the end of 2011, according to Zillow. The optimism extends beyond Zillow. The Sun Sentinel interviewed a dozen builders, buyers, analysts, real estate agents and other local housing observers, and 10 agreed that the region has reached a housing floor, despite concern that another wave of bank-owned homes will hit the market. Sun Sentinel
Submitted 10 days ago

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Will Green Transportation Create Lots of Green Jobs?
President Obama, who made rescuing the auto companies one of his first goals, officially opened his reelection campaign with a rally in Columbus, Ohio telling the crowd of 14,000 that he aims to take the country "forward" while his presumed opponent, Mitt Romney, will slam on the brakes and try to throw the country into reverse. evworld.com
Submitted 11 days ago

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The JOBS Act: IPO on-ramp or public company off-ramp?
A key part of the JOBS Act recently signed by President Obama has been described as creating an “IPO on-ramp” that makes the process of an initial public offering easier and more attractive. In fact, many of the Act’s provisions grew from a task force appointed by the Treasury Department to address a decline in the number of IPOs in recent years. Forbes
Submitted 11 days ago

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Why Economies Boom
One of the major schools of thought in macroeconomics rarely makes it into mainstream discussions: Real Business Cycle Theory. RBC, as it is known, claims that a lot of year-to-year economic volatility is caused by changes to the supply side of the economy: perhaps tax and regulatory changes, bad weather in farm economies, spikes in oil prices, and above all, the mysterious force known as the "technology shock." Finn Kydland and Ed Prescott shared a Nobel, partly for creating RBC theory. The Atlantic
Submitted 11 days ago

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The Anxiety Economy: Why the Future of Work Will Be All About Stress
On Sunday, I learned that a "wantologist" -- what, you don't have one? -- is somebody paid to figure out what you want. Arlie Russell Hochschild, writing in the New York Times, quotes Katherine Ziegler, wantologist, helping a client to figure out what it is that she wants. The conversation went something like this: The Atlantic
Submitted 11 days ago

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Where Do Real Jobs Come From?
The pentagon goes rogue… “Jobs engine sputters again in April,” reports the weekend Wall Street Journal. What kind of humbug recovery is this? Business Insider
Submitted 11 days ago

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States Smarten Up on Economic Development Incentives
States and localities have long regarded corporate tax incentives as handy tools for economic development. Experts, meanwhile, have equally long found occasion for criticism in their implementation. Now, steadily accumulating evidence suggests that states are getting smarter in their design of incentive packages and that the practice is changing, gradually, for the better. The New Republic
Submitted 11 days ago

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Features & Opinion

 
OPINION
By Dennis Cuneo
 

Much has been written about the need to expand and diversify our energy base. With the recent spike in gasoline prices and the Iranian threat to disrupt global oil supplies, some are calling for the equivalent of a Manhattan Project to develop alternative energy sources. Others say that renewables are still too expensive and that we shouldn’t encourage them at the expense of fossil fuels. The highly publicized failure of Solyndra has called into question whether the federal government should continue the U.S. Department of Energy loan program, initiated under the Bush Administration, to provide funding for alternative energy projects. Supporters of the program say that without government funding, we risk ceding leadership of the alternative energy market to China.

 

 

 FEATURE  
By Glenn McCullough, Jr.
 
On February 9 the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission did something it has not done in 34 years: approve a license (two in fact) to build two advanced nuclear reactors. For a consortium of utilities constructing two advanced nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle on the Georgia-South Carolina border, this means major strides generating 2,200 megawatts of new electricity, enough for approximately one million homes and businesses.
 
 
FEATURE  
By Dan Juneau
 
National, state, and local business groups from around the country opposed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (aka “ObamaCare”) when it was being debated in Congress last year.
Many trade association representatives (including this writer) went to Washington to express business community concerns about the legislation and to request votes against it. History records that the legislation (all 2700 pages of nearly incomprehensible jargon) was finally enacted on party line votes in both chambers and signed into law by President Obama.
 
 
by Mike Randle
 
The headline above is of a great song from the '70s. It was by The Outlaws and was recorded in 1975 (go straight to You Tube to listen to it and bring the entire staff into your C-suite and rock on). I was a student but more like the starting shortstop for the University of Tampa Spartans baseball team in 1975.
 


 

 


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