#american-economy

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Business
fromFortune
1 day ago

Turns out the American middle class didn't die. It got richer-and felt poorer | Fortune

Affluent Americans in 2026 experience a sense of unease despite material wealth, reflecting a structural shift in the economy and perceptions of prosperity.
fromEntrepreneur
6 days ago

The Upper Middle Class Used to Be an Exclusive Club. Now Its Membership Is Booming.

Many upper-middle-classers don't even realize they've climbed into this tier. Randy Shilling, a 58-year-old chemical plant worker in Texas, saved more than $3 million for retirement. 'I view myself as an average Joe,' he told The Wall Street Journal. 'But when I want something, I go get it.'
Careers
Startup companies
fromBrooklyn Eagle
3 weeks ago

PREMIUM America's secret weapon: failure

The United States fosters innovation by allowing entrepreneurs to fail and try again, unlike many other countries where failure carries a lasting stigma.
Startup companies
fromKqed
10 months ago

Veteran Journalist Explores Impact of Private Equity on US Society

Megan Greenwell's book exposes how private equity harms the American economy and ordinary citizens.
fromSlate Magazine
10 months ago

Trump Wants to Bring Back Factory Jobs. I Worked on the Assembly Line. It Was Hell.

The Trump administration's nostalgic desire to revive factory jobs reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of modern economic realities and the impossibility of returning to a golden past.
Productivity
Marketing
fromThe Atlantic
11 months ago

How Much Would You Pay for That Doll?

Tariffs may significantly reduce product choices available to consumers, altering shopping habits and emotional connections to items.
US politics
fromwww.mediaite.com
11 months ago

Reeks of Elitism': Ex-Trump White House Honcho Slams Old Boss Over Let Them Eat Cake Moment'

Marc Short criticized Trump's comments on trade and consumer goods as elitist, likening it to a 'let them eat cake' moment.
fromBusiness Insider
11 months ago

Americans don't want Trump's 'masculine' manufacturing jobs

"It's hard to imagine American workers wanting to sit at a sewing machine and repetitively sew for $7.50, $8 an hour, and even that's going to drive up Nike's production costs such that a pair of Nikes will go through the roof," said Betsey Stevenson, a professor of public policy and economics at the University of Michigan.
Tech industry
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