Fortune US - January 2019
Fortune US - January 2019
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En este asunto
The Shrinking Middle Class.
The Ghosn Show.
Biochipping Sci-Fi No More...
The Dean of Dallas Design and more...
Hot Under The White Collar
Around the globe, prosecutors seem to have a growing appetite for holding corporate leaders accountable. What’s driving the shift?
4 mins
The Dean Of Dallas Design
Billionaire Tim Headington is trying to breathe more life into downtown Dallas by giving it a hipper aesthetic.
4 mins
Designing Experiences For A Connected World
“Be bold. Resonate with soul.”
2 mins
VR Gets Real In The OR
Doctors and medical students are increasingly using virtual reality to prepare for surgery.
3 mins
Tackling ‘Tough Tech'
Unlike many venture capitalists, Katie Rae is a fan of startups that take on big and complicated problems.
4 mins
Forget Pie In The Sky, Drones Are Saving Lives
Drones may one day make your life easier by delivering pizza, but today—in Rwanda—they are already playing a vital role in emergency medical services.
3 mins
When Workers And Investors Share The Wealth
Being stingy with pay and benefits can boost profits in the short term. But companies—and their stocks—may do better when they’re generous.
4 mins
Why Business Must Step Up To Shape The Next Industrial Revolution
Technological disruption threatens to create a gap between business’s priorities and society’s. Here’s how business leaders can harness the “Fourth Industrial Revolution” for everyone’s benefit.
3 mins
Beautiful And Sustainable
Big players in one of the planet’s most polluting industries are finally getting serious about their environmental responsibilities.
3 mins
The Shrinking Middle Class
THE VAST MAJORITY OF AMERICANS consider themselves “middle class.”No one can quite agree, though, on what that means. Richard Reeves, along with colleagues at the Brookings Institution, has cataloged no fewer than a dozen economic formulas that seek to define this elastic cohort largely by what people earn each year: household income between X and Y; personal income that’s within some percentage of the national median; distance from the poverty line; and so on. Combine the lot, and the range of who might be considered middle class is extraordinarily expansive—including anyone from a single, part-time bartender scratching by on $13,000 a year to a suburban power couple pulling in $230,000, or 90% of American households in all.
10+ mins
Fortune US Magazine Description:
Editor: Fortune Media (USA) Corporation
Categoría: Business
Idioma: English
Frecuencia: Bi-Monthly
FORTUNE covers the entire field of business, including specific companies and business trends, tech innovation prominent business leaders, and new ideas shaping the global marketplace. FORTUNE is particularly well known for its exceptionally reliable annual rankings of companies. FORTUNE furthers understanding of the economy, provides implementable business strategy, and gives you the practical knowledge you need to maximize your own success.
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