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- 1From:Global Banking NewsGlobal Banking News-October 18, 2021-Compass Mining continues to lower barriers to entry for bitcoin mining (C)2021 ENPublishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk Compass Mining, an online marketplace for bitcoin...
- 2From:ProtoView9780796925893 Opening the South African Economy: Barriers to Entry and Competition Edited by Thando Vilakazi, Sumayya Goga, and Simon Roberts Human Sciences Research Council 2020 254 pages $35.00 DT351...
- 3From:American TheatreThe following is an edited excerpt from Towards a Civic Theater by Dan Hutton, published by Salamander Street and available online and in bookstores. Summer 2020. Two contrasting spaces. One full of life. Another...
- 4From:The EconomistA guide for foreign workers at Chinese companies THE CORONAVIRUS pandemic has led to some testy moments in diplomatic relations between China and the democratic world. But in the long run, China's economic power is...
- 5From:The Economist (Vol. 427, Issue 9091)The last in our series on the shortcomings of economics looks at the discipline's lack of diversity SCIENCE is supposed to be the ultimate meritocracy. People might sneer at a thinker's background or training, but...
- 6From:Sleep Review (Vol. 21, Issue 1)Gone are the days when opening a private sleep medicine practice meant investing hundreds of thousands of dollars in sleep study equipment. As the sleep medicine landscape evolves, more physicians are forgoing...
- 7From:Reason (Vol. 50, Issue 7)IF YOU WERE drafted in 1968--and in fiscal year 1968, about 334,000 Americans were drafted into the U.S. armed forces--the government controlled the next two years of your life. Assuming you lasted two years, that is....
- 8From:The Economist (Vol. 321, Issue 7735)The AIDS epidemic and the recent revelation that Magic Johnson is HIV positive have brought much larger profits to the condom industry. Both Carter-Wallace of the US and the London International Group are reporting large...
- 9From:Inc. (Vol. 28, Issue 2)I can relate to Praveen Suthrum, the Indian entrepreneur who is having trouble running his American business because of visa hassles ["Cracks in the Melting Pot," December]. I too am having problems with visa and visit...
- 10From:American Banker (Vol. 173, Issue 91)New capital pouring into the battered mortgage insurance industry could redraw the competitive map, and start-ups, unencumbered by lousy loans, may be best positioned to benefit. Thomas Abruzzo, a managing director...
- 11From:The Economist (Vol. 389, Issue 8611)A rise in protection would worsen the already grim outlook for world trade REMEMBER 1982, when the Soviet threat haunted America and China was still a giant backwater that had only just started reforming its economy?...
- 12From:American Banker (Vol. 176, Issue 164)Byline: Donna Borak WASHIINGTON a More homeowners will now be eligible to refinance their homes and tap historic low interest rates due to significant changes to a critical government program by the Federal Housing...
- 13From:The Economist (Vol. 353, Issue 8150)Takeover practices across Europe are in need of greater clarity and transparency. The markets may be better than the EU at providing them "WILL greed triumph?" wondered Germany's mass-market Bild Zeitung. "Takeover?...
- 14From:Accounting Today (Vol. 23, Issue 16)Byline: Mont Levy CPAs are brilliantly positioned to become successful and profitable wealth managers, yet they often face barriers that, without proper planning, can keep them from taking the necessary steps to...
- 15From:The Economist (Vol. 400, Issue 8749)Worth every penny? Lawyers keep their numbers carefully pruned, pushing up costs "OVERLAWYERED" is the name of a widely read blog on America's legal system, and many Americans feel that way. Yet three economists...
- 16From:Inc. (Vol. 23, Issue 13)Street Smarts By Norm Brodsky You often hear these days that the barriers to entry are dropping in industry after industry. It's easier, we're told, to get into pretty much any business today than it ever has...
- 17From:Foreign Policy (Issue 202)AMERICANS SPENT MUCH of this summer arguing over immigration reform, and South Africans spent much of it contemplating Nelson Mandela's legacy. But the link between the two went unnoticed: One of Mandela's biggest...
- 18From:PC WeekAn evaluation is presented of Sun Microsystems' new operating system, Solaris 7.0 Easy Access Server. The software includes a powerful 64-bit kernel, which provides a larger memory capacity, as well as simplified...
- 19From:American Banker (Vol. 1, Issue 84)Byline: Chris Cumming The hot commercial-finance market has spurred more banks to take a look at factoring, a form of asset-backed lending popular in the retail industry. The trouble is that a host of companies...
- 20From:Automotive News (Vol. 74, Issue 5883)As Volkswagen AG's board member in charge of China operations, Robert Buechelhofer is what economists call a ``barrier to entry'' to competitors. And he has put up a formidable barrier indeed: Volkswagen has built up...