CEO Confidence Plummets
Conference BoardChief executives' confidence in the nation's economy plummeted to its lowest reading in more than seven years in the third quarter of 1998, The Conference Board reports today.
Chief executives' confidence in the nation's economy plummeted to its lowest reading in more than seven years in the third quarter of 1998, The Conference Board reports today.
There's an old rule: Where business goes, the law is sure to follow. The law should start catching up with the travel industry. The global travel industry is the fastest growing industry in the world but it is a neglected legal specialty in the US.
Choosing the right MBA program can be a lot like looking for a soul mate: there are a lot of attractive candidates, but it's critical for individuals to find the right match, says a University of Illinois at Chicago business school official.
Ohio State's Fisher College of Business dedicated the first two buildings Oct. 20 and 21 in what will be a new six-building, $120 million complex. The new complex will help the Fisher College become one of the few fully integrated business campuses in the country.
The scariest part of Halloween is finding Christmas decorations on department store shelves, says a Ball State University retail analyst.
Contrary to media reports and the perceptions of some medical students and even a few medical school advisors, practice opportunities for anesthesiologists are excellent, Norig Ellison, M.D., past president of the American Society of Anesthesiologists said at the society's annual meeting.
Nuclear energy's value in meeting climate change goals is increasingly being recognized due to the convergence of key energy and environmental imperatives.
Experts from industry, government, environmental groups and the research community will meet in McLean, Va., in December for a four-day international conference on air quality.
While you won't live forever, maybe you can do something about those taxes. "As people start to look at the end of their lives, they get the feeling that they want to have made some impact in living," says John Hatcher, Purdue University assistant professor of management. "My advice to them is: 'Give while you live.'"
Economic study of more than 46,000 employees finds stress and depression have the greatest impact on worker health care costs. These risk factors increased health care costs more than obesity, smoking or high blood pressure.
A Distinguished Research Scientist with Glaxo Wellcome Inc. and the inventor of combinatorial chemistry--a technique for rapidly creating and testing vast `libraries' of chemical compounds--will serve as honorary chairperson for an Oct. 22-23 conference at the University of Delaware.
Senior executives expect their companies to be significantly hit over the next year by the global economic crisis, according to a poll of top human resources executives released today by The Conference Board.
To honor the late Jean McKelvey, the first faculty member of Cornell University's School of Industrial and Labor Relations and the first woman to serve as president of the National Academy of Arbitrators, the United Auto Workers (UAW) awarded her posthumously the UAW Social Justice Award at their convention in June.
Employers should take heart, says Baylor University management professor Dr. Joe Cox. The average Generation Y worker could turn out to be a keeper, he predicts.
Nearly twice as many people with degrees in science and engineering (S&E) fields were employed in non-S&E occupations as were employed in S&E jobs in 1995, according to data collected by the National Science Foundation.
The William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administration has announced the launch of the country's first M.B.A. brand management specialization.
In an effort to educate a new generation of health care leaders expert in both the medical and economic aspects of health care, the University of Rochester has announced its intention to establish an M.D./M.B.A. program.
A pig production operation is easier on the nose and the surrounding environment, thanks to timely assistance from researchers at the University of North Dakota Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC).
Walton Family Charitable Support Foundation makes largest gift ever to a college of business administration: $50 million to the University of Arkansas.
Survey by UGA Professor shows that the job market has improved for mass communications and journalism graduates.
The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) is presenting the Fourth National User Group Meeting for users of CAHPS (Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Study) October 14-16, 1998, at the Omni Inner Harbor Hotel, Baltimore, MD.
Outside company directors enjoyed an 11% increase in median total compensation this year, largely because companies are increasingly offering stock as well as basic pay, according to an advance report released today by The Conference Board.
What goes up comes down. After years of extraordinary growth sparked by the rising stock market, Illinois faces diminished tax revenues if the New York Stock Exchange continues its recent skid, a University of Illinois economist says.
Processing wrinkle-free and dye-colored cotton fabric with formaldehyde-free chemicals in one step -- saving money and reducing environmental hazards -- is potentially in the grasp of industry as a result of experiments at the University of Illinois.
The push by airlines to team up in global route alliances, which has raised the specter of higher fares in government circles, may be overall good news for consumers, according to a University of Illinois economist.
In the Oct. 12, 1998 issue of Applied Physics Letters, online Oct. 7, University of Delaware researchers--with scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory and Raytheon Systems Co.--describe the first tunnel diode that is compatible with a silicon integrated circuit process." The diodes may help chip makers boost silicon's speed while further shrinking chips.
A University of Iowa College of Law professor, has been asked to present his research on the status of the Americans with Disabilities Act to a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee at its first major inquiry on the ADA in Washington D.C., Monday, Oct. 5.
On Nov. 2, 1998, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear a landmark bankruptcy case that may change the way small businesses recover after filing bankruptcy. To explain this complex case to the public, a University of Missouri-Columbia law school professor has established a web site for educators, students, the media, business owners and a general audience to use as a resource to help them comprehend the 203 N. LaSalle St. case.
"With Congress and the White House poised to enact a new law expanding the number of H1-B visas granted over the next 3 years, the bill will achieve little with respect to the fundamental problem of attracting enough young people to pursue careers in engineering," says American Association of Engineering Societies (AAES) Chair Martha Sloan.
A new study suggests that MBA students have clear ideas of which tactics are ethically proper and improper in the course of business negotiations. But the students' views are shaped by their gender, nationality, age, work experience, and other factors.
Despite an erratic stock market, political scandals at home and financial crises abroad, Orange County residents remain strongly optimistic about the nation's economic future, according to UC Irvine's 1998 Orange County Annual Survey.
The Federal Aviation Administration is uniting with Purdue and a dozen other universities to head off a looming shortage of air traffic controllers. The FAA put its stamp of approval on programs at 13 universities, including Purdue University's aviation administration program, which is designed for individuals seeking careers in either airline or FAA management.
Survey shows that a $10 investment to enroll in MONEY 2000, a Cornell Cooperative Extension financial education program, reaped an average $5,000 gain in net worth for participants one year later. Just six months in the program , more than half the participants were already paying bills on time, reducing their credit use, saving money, using a budget and reducing what they owed.
Lower oil prices may be good news for gasoline buyers, but they're taking a toll on Kansas petroleum producers, according to geologists at the Kansas Geological Survey, based at the University of Kansas. And things don't promise to change anytime soon. Oil prices in the state have plummeted since last spring, dropping from around $20 per barrel to around $10 for Kansas crude. The drop, researchers say, is yet more fallout from the rest of the world's economic problems.
Becoming a successful manager in a global firm in the new millennium is going to take a global mindset. So says Vijay Govindarajan, director of the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration 's Global Leadership 2020 program.
The first new twist in MBA programs was special arrangements for busy executives. Now the programs have gone international. More than 100 colleges and universities in the United States and Canada are now offering executive MBAs with an international component. "What you learned as an undergraduate 20 years ago isn't enough to lead or to compete in today's global workplace," says Martin Rapisarda, director of the executive master's programs at Purdue's Krannert Graduate School of Management.
Employee obesity dramatically increases health care needs and costs of business. Overweight women over 45 face highest heatlh risks. Study suggests worker weight loss programs can reduce employer medical and short-term disability costs.
1. Asian stability could trigger inflationary pressures in U.S.; 2. Mergers and creating value; 3. Successful downsizing requires maintaining trust; 4. Businesses need strategy to influence public policy
The benefits of placing workers in teams reflecting a diverse range of backgrounds can be jeopardized if the effects of stereotyping are not understood, according to a professor at Wake Forest University.
Georgia State University's College of Business Administration has been named in honor of of J. Mack Robinson, an Atlanta banking and insurance executive.
Don't expect Nike, Reebok and other athletic shoe companies to rebound any time soon from sluggish sales, says a Ball State University retail analyst.
Recent gyrations on Wall Street and the near economic collapse by several Asian nations have had an unsettling effect on America consumers and businesses, lowering confidence about future economic growth, says a Ball State University economic analyst.
The oft-stated rationale that a CEO's reputation is valuable because it increases a firm's credibility doesn't correlate with a company's bottom line, University of Illinois researchers say.
Changes in federal regulation giving chemical companies flexibility in deciding how to reduce toxic pollution are producing measurable results, according to researchers at the University of Illinois who studied the impact of the 33/50 program started by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1991 to encourage firms to reduce pollution emissions.
While many Americans hate their jobs and are badly in need of career consulting, an almost equal number of individuals eagerly look forward to going to work every day, according to an article in Across The Board, The Conference Board magazine.
The pace of economic decline in most Asian countries is slowing, particularly in Korea and Thailand, according to an analysis released today by The Conference Board.
While the field of information technology has often been thought of as a male-dominated profession that attracts only "computer nerds," those demographics are changing, according to the director of the Information Technology Program (ITPro) at Old Dominion University.
The cost of wafer fabrication equipment used to make semiconductors has soared tenfold about every decade, and the future of the industry may be limited by capital costs. One way to cope with this problem is the development of modular capacity, a concept Stanford Business School faculty members have examined closely.
Approval of Texas-Maine-Vermont Low-Level Waste Bill Will Help Continue Benefits of Nuclear Technologies
A University of Kansas economics professor and associate director of KU's Institute for Public Policy and Business Research, is currently in Moscow and is available to discuss Russia's economy on a first-hand basis.