Wharton professor of health care management Patricia Danzon discusses Cuba’s health care system.
Wharton professor of health care management Patricia Danzon discusses Cuba’s health care system.
While America grows more culturally diverse, businesses are struggling with the question of whether it’s possible to communicate a single, homogenous message — especially at this time of year.
Latin America is destined to emerge as one of the most important regions in the global market for mobile telephones, experts say.
Is social media capable of growing up someday — reacting quickly, but also digesting the facts and subtle contours of arguments, and fixing its gaze on a subject until resolution? Or is it just not built for traction?
Named CEO of Deloitte last March, and listed in Crain’s “50 Most Powerful Women in New York” for 2015, Cathy Engelbert attributes her success to one personality trait above all: confidence.
In a new book, ‘The Internet to the Inner-Net,’ Google’s Gopi Kallayil challenges the idea that there is never enough time in our digitally connected world.
Wharton professor Robert Hughes contends that it doesn’t take long to find examples of ethical behavior being practiced even in the absence of serious legal consequences. He finds that laws, even weak ones without specific sanctions, serve a definite purpose in modern society.
The secretary general of the European Stability Mechanism, Kalin Anev Janse, discusses Greece, the key risks for Europe’s economy and how his group directs hundreds of billions of euros in financial crisis loan support.
There’s a lot more to Goodwill’s charitable model than is obvious from its ubiquitous thrift stores. Jim Gibbons, head of Goodwill Industries International, explains.
Arash Massoudi of London’s Financial Times newspaper discusses Anheuser-Busch InBev’s acquisition of SABMiller.
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