Economy

Economy Articles

By David Callaway, Callaway Climate Insights With less than 70 days until the COP26 global climate summit begins in Glasgow, Scotland, plans and priorities are frantically being set against a...
The population in one county in North Dakota more than doubled from 2010 to 2020, due largely to the huge fracking boom.
The state with the most student debt is also among the poorest.
The safest cities in the world are in highly developed nations. The capital of Denmark tops the list.
By David Callaway, Callaway Climate Insights Among the environmental challenges for ski resorts, wildfires don’t often leap to mind. But this week, the fastest-growing fire in California has...
A 24/7 Wall St. analysis revealed one small town in Texas as the least educated in the United States.
Using data from the U.S. Census Bureau, 24/7 Wall St. has identified the state with the most veterans.
Traveling has started to return, at least until recently, as the COVID-19 pandemic had begun to become less of a health hazard. A new surge of cases could delay the revival of American travel, for...
What goes into an evaluation of whether or not a city is safe. Crime? Personal liberty? Dangerously dirty air? Bad weather brought on by climate change? The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) released...
See why a new analysis ranks this southern state as the worst for work-life balance.
Work/life balance is a relatively new concept. There was a time when Americans (mostly men decades ago) were supposed to work as many hours as their employers wanted and move from place to place when...
More news businesses fail than become successes. The BLS puts the failure rate at 65% over the first 10 years after a start-up. The reasons for failure range from inadequate capital to poor...
The costs to raise a family vary from nation to nation, and a recent analysis shows that the least expensive is Turkey.
By David Callaway, Callaway Climate Insights For eight minutes yesterday morning, the climate emergency came to my front door. A brush fire a quarter-mile away off a highway had begun to climb a hill...
Less than half of all students went to college out of state. Three-quarters of those from one New England state did.