Word: arens
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...more? They can only echo Cottin, the former lobbyist: "When I read the figures on the unemployment rate I'm very troubled, because no one is seeing the real problem in this country. Someone needs to tell Bill Clinton that some of the most talented people in the country aren't working simply because they were born before 1950." Someone should convey the same message to employers who moan about how hard it is to find qualified help in today's tight labor markets...
...moment of complete irrationality," says Bond Snodgrass, an analyst at Warburg Dillon Read in Mexico City. "But this should finally drive home the point: Mexico is no longer just Mexico, Brazil is no longer just Brazil. They're all part of one asset class now, and investors aren't distinguishing between any of them." And the dramatic drop in the U.S. markets--after months of talk about a "Goldilocks economy"--demonstrated once again that markets hate nothing so much as uncertainty. Russia's pain evidently would also be the world...
...parents warned us about." For 364 days of the year, we deal with unadulterated crap, but on the 365th, Buffett comes to town and we slip away to Margaritaville. Being a Parrothead isn't without its responsibilities, however. Like Gypsies in the Palace, Parrotheads know that the good times aren't free, that giving back is part of the Pascagoula Run. BETH MEISNER Yorktown...
Kids taking a laptop to college apparently aren't making the best use of their parents' investment. Only a small fraction of the high school class of 1998 is thinking of a career in the lucrative field of computer science, preferring business, education and health services. With a shortage of qualified computer workers for jobs that are expected to double in number by 2006, students would be wise to log on and make the grade...
...Currency controls aren't anathema to Westerners for nothing: They?re very vulnerable to abuse and corruption; they require massive bureacracies to regulate; and the sheer complexities of a government's implementation of them tends to scare away capital. Because Mahathir?s plan places tight limits on importers and exporters as well as Malaysians who travel abroad, it also means regulatory headaches for the governments of neighboring countries. Currency controls have traditionally resulted in stagnation and recession, and tend to move countries farther away from the reforms they will eventually need to prosper in today?s unforgiving global economy...