Creating the right atmosphere: How should carbon-emissions permits be allocated?

If you had an asset worth billions of dollars, would you give it away free? No? Would you hand it over if charging for it would clobber farmers with added expense, hobble businesses in similar fashion, boost unemployment and raise the cost of living for just about everyone?

Recession aftermath: A tentative scenario

The near-term outlook for the national economy continues to improve, but full recovery will be slow in coming, says Lee McPheters, editor of Economy@W. P. Carey. After decreasing this year, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is expected to grow next year, but hundreds of thousands mo

Western states unemployment: The rest of the story

Most are aware that the official unemployment rate tells only part of the story. Lee McPheters, in the lead story of the Western Blue Chip Economic Forecast, writes that the U.S.

Bottom five: Weakest large labor markets in July

The Phoenix area was the nation's weakest large labor market in July, according to figures recently released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Nobel laureate Myerson tells China to spend more of its dollars

Roger Myerson, a Nobel Laureate in Economics from the University of Chicago, told an audience of Chinese business executives and government officials recently that their country might do better if it liquidated some of its American investments.

U.S. economy: Can 77,255 Americans be wrong?

A recent internet poll posted on the Money magazine web site asked "When will the U.S. economy improve?" The answer from 80 percent of those responding was that the economy will improve no sooner than next year, or even later.

Adverse to whom? Insurance company fears of 'adverse selection' may be unfounded

For decades, insurance companies have been pricing policies based on the belief that adverse selection comes into play among their customers.

U.S. economy: Is the free fall finished?

Nobody would claim the U.S. economy is healthy right now. After all, we are in the worst contraction since the Great Depression, and poor numbers are being posted for almost every economic indicator.

Unemployment's uneven impact

The U.S. unemployment rate went up again in June, rising to 9.5 percent (seasonally adjusted).

Video: Shaping the way we think about trade

The Kearny Alliance and Arizona State University are co-hosting a series of forums in the U.S. and in China to explore global trade challenges and their impact on the evolving trade infrastructure.