
Top News
The House on Wednesday passed the "No Budget, No Pay Act," a Republican bill that would effectively defuse the debt ceiling threat for several months. The bill would let the Treasury Department borrow new money until mid-May. In exchange, the legislation would require lawmakers in both chambers of Congress to pass a budget resolution or have their pay withheld until they do. (CNN/Money)
Visit http://money.cnn.com/2013/01/23/news/economy/debt-ceiling-house-republicans/index.html?iid=Lead to view the full article online.
Career
Imagine your next performance review – they're booing. Management thinks you screwed up, big-time, so they're taking away half your pay. And they've got a report describing your mistakes – it's over 100 pages. That's what happened recently to JPMorgan Chase's star CEO, Jamie Dimon. (CNBC)
Visit http://www.cnbc.com/id/100397379 to view the full article online.
International
Germany and France have warned UK Prime Minister David Cameron that Britain cannot pick and choose EU membership terms after he pledged a referendum. (BBC News)
Visit http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-21159368 to view the full article online.
The recession in Europe is entering its fifth year and unemployment doesn't look like it will be returning to normal levels anytime soon. In the countries with debt problems, especially Greece and Spain, unemployment skyrocketed in the last couple of years and is now at unprecedented levels. One in two young workers is out of a job. (CNN International)
Visit http://edition.cnn.com/2013/01/21/business/pissarides-eurozone-unemployment/index.html to view the full article online.
Education
Confident that aspiring corporate leaders want to worship more than just the almighty dollar, Catholic University of America is creating a new business school. The Washington, D.C., university announced launch of its new School of Business and Economics on Tuesday, infusing an education in strategy, accounting and marketing with instruction in morals, character and religious values. (The Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323706704578227870324048476.html to view the full article online.
Commentary in the popular press and systematic empirical research both suggest that levels of narcissism are increasing among college students. James Westerman and Joseph Daly’s evidence shows that business school students are more narcissistic than others, such as psychology students. The millennial generation, raised by "helicopter parents" focused on their every success, comes in for particular criticism. (Bloomberg/Businessweek)
Visit http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-01-15/does-it-matter-if-b-schools-produce-narcissists to view the full article online.
Technology
To understand how Samsung – yes, Samsung – became America's No. 1 mobile phonemaker and thorn in Apple's side, it's helpful to rewind to last fall. On a mid-September morning, Apple CEO Tim Cook stepped onto a stage in San Francisco to unveil the iPhone 5. Several hundred miles away, in a Wolfgang Puck restaurant in Los Angeles, a group of marketing executives from Samsung Electronics followed real-time reactions to Cook's remarks. (Fortune)
Visit http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2013/01/22/samsung-apple-smartphone/?iid=F_F500M to view the full article online.
Even Disney agrees, NFC is one of the closest technologies we have to actual magic. It’s an extremely low-power radio signal that allows data to hop from a poster or sticker to a system like a smartphone. And it can enable all sorts of new user experiences that can connect the digital world to our analog environment. Imagine not just unlocking your car with a wave of your phone but having it launch Bluetooth, stream your favorite Pandora station, launch GPS, and text your spouse that you’re on your way home. (Fast Company)
Visit http://www.fastcodesign.com/1671623/what-keeps-nfc-from-explosive-growth-a-gateway-product#1 to view the full article online.
Entrepreneurship
If you ask venture capitalists in Silicon Valley how they measure the success of business entrepreneurs, they would no doubt list off metrics having to do with fast growth: funding raised, people hired, customers acquired, revenue produced. The assumption is that company growth is good. But when it comes to social ventures, where the primary focus is impact (not profits), bigger isn't necessarily better. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/01/its_not_all_about_growth_for_s.html to view the full article online.
The Economy
There's a funny thing about the estimated $1.7 trillion that American companies say they have indefinitely invested overseas: A lot of it is actually sitting right here at home. Some companies, including Internet giant Google Inc., software maker Microsoft Corp. and data-storage specialist EMC Corp., keep more than three-quarters of the cash owned by their foreign subsidiaries at U.S. banks, held in U.S. dollars or parked in U.S. government and corporate securities, according to people familiar with the companies' cash positions. (The Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323301104578255663224471212.html to view the full article online.
Personal Finance
It's so tempting. You turn 62, and Uncle Sam is willing to start handing over Social Security benefits – every month for the rest of your life. Before you take the money and run, consider the potential pleasures of deferred gratification. Whether you're single or married, waiting to claim your benefits – even by a year or two – is likely to pay off in higher benefits over your lifetime. (Kiplinger's)
Visit http://www.kiplinger.com/article/retirement/T051-C000-S004-strategies-to-boost-your-social-security.html to view the full article online.
Corporate America
On March 16, 2007, Morgan Stanley employees working on one of the toxic assets that helped blow up the world economy discussed what to name it. Among the team members’ suggestions: "Subprime Meltdown," "Hitman," "Nuclear Holocaust" and "Mike Tyson’s Punchout," as well a simple yet direct reference to a bag of excrement. Ha ha. Those hilarious investment bankers. Then they gave it its real name and sold it to a Chinese bank. (The New York Times)
Visit http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/01/23/financial-crisis-lawsuit-suggests-bad-behavior-at-morgan-stanley/?hp to view the full article online.
There are times when you just have to sit back and marvel at all the things IBM (IBM) does right. IBM, for example, has mastered the art of the CEO transition. It’s had three CEOs in the past 20 years, vs. Hewlett-Packard’s (HPQ) four CEOs in the last 30 months. IBM sold off low-margin businesses like PCs and hard drives ages ago and headed upmarket to services and software. (Bloomberg/Businessweek)
Visit http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-01-22/ibm-makes-more-money-selling-less-of-what-people-want#r=hpt-ls to view the full article online.
The shakeup of Delta Air Lines' highly profitable frequent flyer mileage program is a bold move – one that could lead to a volley of disastrous unintended consequences. Requiring a minimum spend to achieve elite status on the airline would alienate Delta's fiercely-loyal lower-margin customers, all while providing no real incremental benefit to the airline's current high rollers, (Fortune)
Visit http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/2013/01/23/delta-frequent-flyer/?iid=SF_F_River to view the full article online.
Government
There are a couple of fundamental questions at the bottom of Washington's ongoing battles over deficits and debt: (1) How big should the U.S. government to be? and (2) How should we pay for it? The answers to both will ultimately have to be political ones — messy calculations based on who pays, who benefits, who votes, and who makes the campaign contributions. But it would be nice to know what the economics are, wouldn't it? (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/fox/2013/01/how-big-should-government-be.html to view the full article online.
Leadership
As more time passes since the financial crisis, executives with financial expertise are finding the CEO position more elusive. Large U.S. companies last year hired the lowest percentage of chief executives with a finance background since before the crisis, according to the forthcoming 2012 Volatility Report from executive recruiter Crist|Kolder Associates. (The Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2013/01/22/ceo-hires-with-finance-chops-become-rare-study/ to view the full article online.
Lifestyle
Let's cut the crap. Life is short, you have less time than you think, and there are no baby unicorns coming to save you. So rather than doling out craptastic advice to you about Making!! It!! To!! The!! Top!!™, let me humbly ask: do you want to have a year that matters – or do you want to spend another year starring-slash-wallowing in the lowest-common-denominator reality show-slash-whiny soap opera of your own inescapable mediocrity-slash-self-imposed tragedy? (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/haque/2013/01/how_to_have_a_year_that_matter.html to view the full article online.
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