The Athletic Programs That Score High for Gender Bias

With a poor hiring record for female college coaches, many universities and athletic conferences have received dismal gender bias grades.

Weekly Economic News Roundup: From Healthy Pets to Home Chefs

Combining economic ideas, current events, and history, our weekly economic news roundup includes the significance of pet healthcare and Chinese yogurt.

What We Can Learn From the First Brexit

Like a contentious divorce, Brexit negotiations take us back to an EU exit precedent and forward to untangling countless agreements and regulations.

What the New Chinese Consumer is Buying

Buying more yogurt, movie tickets and premium products instead of instant noodles, the consumer is a new focus for China’s statisticians.

A New Meaning For Food Court

Like Uber and Airbnb, the growing popularity of Eat With Stranger Apps (EWSAs) is creating sharing economy dilemmas that relate to regulation.

The World’s Most Expensive Bread

More than a number, the cost of living in the world’s most expensive cities is about bread and wine and who can afford to stay.

What Pets Can Teach Us About Healthcare Spending

We cannot avoid unintended consequences from healthcare legislation because healthcare spending has no “one-size-fits-all” solution.

Weekly Economic News Roundup: From Commas to Colors

Connecting economic ideas, current events and history, our weekly economic news roundup includes color branding, Social Security funding and costly kids.

Why Social Security Needs Immigrants

Because unauthorized immigrants pay billions of dollars in payroll taxes, they are one solution to the Social Security solvency problem.

What State Gasoline Taxes and a LUST Fund Have in Common

A LUST Trust Fund and higher state gasoline taxes may come in handy if massive federal infrastructure spending becomes more doubtful.