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Beth has done it again...check out her curated list of reads and you will be well-equipped to enrich others with your knowledge of monopsony (don't worry I had to look it up too!), melt-ups, physics of electric car batteries, "going gray" and the supply/demand situation for donated clothes. Enjoy your weekend!
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Technology/CES
The routes tech-savvy executives choose to protect their tweens and teens online vary, from close monitoring to guiding them in managing the hazards themselves.
The companies say improved security features, in particular the chips that in recent years have been embedded in most Americans’ debit and credit cards, outweigh the security provided by signatures. Some say a written name scrawled on a slip of paper or electronic pad fails to provide much protection these days. Removing the signature will also speed up in-store checkout for many consumers, they add.
Lifestyle/Wellness
"We know food insecurity and, unfortunately, chronic disease go hand in hand," says Joe Prickitt, a UCSD dietitian who is senior director of Más Fresco. "For SNAP participants, there's a real cost barrier to buying fruits and vegetables. They say they're just too expensive." For every dollar's worth of food stamps enrollees spend on fresh produce in a given month, they receive a one-to-one match — up to $10, $20 or $40 — that they can spend only on more fruits and vegetables. The UC-San Diego researchers who are studying the program varied the maximum reward amounts and assigned them randomly to participants to help determine the optimal dollar level that changes people's dietary habits.
“If a company can raise the majority of its growth equity capital privately and float their shares in a broker-free offering, it would be scary for the underwriting business,” said Michael Sobel, co-founder of Scenic Advisement, an investment bank serving private tech companies. “The IPO is a cornerstone of the banking business.”
Economics- Monopoly and Monopsony- Supply and Demand
“A growing number of critics think these tech giants need to be broken up or regulated as Standard Oil and AT&T once were. Their alleged sins run the gamut from disseminating fake news and fostering addiction to laying waste to small towns’ shopping districts. But antitrust regulators have a narrow test: Does their size leave consumers worse off?”
In the years following the Great Recession, the U.S. labor market was incredibly concentrated, with a relatively small number of businesses posting help-wanted ads across different industries and cities. That appeared to put downward pressure on wages; the more concentrated the local market, the lower pay tended to be, the study’s authors found. This, the study’s authors argued, was a sign that U.S. employers had an enormous amount of monopsony power—meaning they were essentially free to set low wages, because few other businesses were around or hiring.
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INFOGRAPHIC: Amazon versus Google - who is winning the voice battle?
http://www.visualcapitalist.com/smart-speaker-market-share/
NGPF Podcast: Tim Talks With Social Entrepreneur Elizabeth Dettke
Question of the Day: How much more does a college graduate 25-34 years old earn annually compared to a non-graduate?
Question of the Day: If you invested $1,000 in Netflix stock 10 years ago, what would it be worth now?
Question of the Day: What percent of teens have started investing?
Question of the Day: What is the median and average retirement savings for people under 35?
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