Details on the big tax reform proposal remain sketchy. What seems clear: As proposed, the tax cuts do not pay for themselves and will spike up the deficit.
Details on the big tax reform proposal remain sketchy. What seems clear: As proposed, the tax cuts do not pay for themselves and will spike up the deficit.
Hydros cofounder and CEO Winston Ibrahim has a plan to gain market share in the water filtration business dominated by Brita.
Wharton’s Philip Nichols and Penn’s Mitchell Orenstein discuss the connections between Russian oligarchs, the Kremlin and the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
The world’s economic system faces five tough challenges. Multilateral institutions offer the best hope of managing them, notes this opinion piece by the secretary general of the European Stability Mechanism.
Google’s redevelopment plans in Toronto could lend some insight into what other companies — including Amazon — are looking for in headquarters locations.
Former Alibaba executive Porter Erisman says emerging markets are the next e-commerce frontier.
As Republicans scramble to find revenue sources to fund tax cuts, Wharton experts warn against attempts to increase taxes on retirement savings.
Former Apple CEO John Sculley talks to Knowledge@Wharton about Steve Jobs, what Apple is doing right, and the future of marketing, fintech and health care.
A recent decision by Morgan Stanley Capital International not to upgrade Argentina’s economy to “emerging” status dealt a blow to the nation’s pride. But there are plenty of reasons for optimism about the future, experts say.
Google product manager Apoorv Saxena discusses the new horizons — and limits — in the increasingly important world of artificial intelligence.
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