The New York Times published a new episode of "The Ezra Klein Show" on Friday featuring an interview with Rana Foroohar, CNN’s global economic analyst and a Financial Times columnist. In the interview ...
On Reality Asserts Itself, Ms. Foroohar says many wealthy people understand that the climate crisis, deep recession and war are real threats, but they believe “apres moi le deluge [after me comes the ...
Before the global downturn, 75-year-old Sheldon G. Adelson, Chairman of The Las Vegas Sands Corp., was the ultimate high roller. For a time America’s third-richest man, he helped rebrand Las Vegas as ...
On Reality Asserts Itself, Ms. Foroohar says financialization delivers stagnant wages, inequality and economic crisis; the Financial Times columnist and author of “Makers and Takers” says the ...
Financial Times columnist Rana Foroohar, who has been reporting on business and tech for 30 years, opened a credit card bill to find that her young son had bought $900 worth of $1.99 in-app purchases ...
Every Tuesday and Friday, Ezra Klein invites you into a conversation about something that matters, like today’s episode with Rana Foroohar. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. Transcripts of our ...
Shifting sentiment around “surveillance capitalism” and tech giants like Google and Facebook may come to a head in 2020, says Rana Foroohar, associate editor for The Financial Times. However, the ...
Clean tech will create jobs, but subtly. One of the most common bits of post-recessionary wisdom is that the world is on its way to a prolonged period of high inflation. With all that public stimulus ...
Even as the United States is busy pouring money into its own system, China has ponied up almost a billion dollars to prop up its stock market since the financial crisis. As we saw last week, we’re ...
If you have any doubt about the long-term implications of hunger, consider the following statistic. In North Korea, where food shortages and famine have been endemic for years, the average adolescent ...
Beijing lost a fair bit of face yesterday when Chinalco, a Chinese state-backed aluminum company, was forced to walk away from a $19.5 billion offer to purchase a large chunk of Anglo-Australian ...