Saturday, September 29, 2012

China: For Many Expats, It's Not Worth It

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BW Insider

Sep 26, 2012

This Week's Top Story

This Week's Top Story - China: For Many Expats, It's Not Worth It

Global Economics

China: For Many Expats, It's Not Worth It

With a slowing economy and endless red tape, foreigners decide it's time to pack up

More Top Stories

This Airline Wants You to Buy the Jet Fuel

Allegiant Travel is mulling a way to base its ticket prices on fuel costs: After you book, you pay more if they rise or see a refund should they drop

How a Weak Economy Just Hurt Romney's Campaign

Staples, Romney's proudest achievement at Bain Capital, is closing 60 stores

Tesla Fires Up Solar-Powered Charging Stations

Tesla Motors has begun its quest to build a nationwide network of charging stations for electric cars

Another Letter to Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell

Here's what I suggest: Tell the six senators to come back with scored, sponsored legislative language, because that's what senators do

The NFL Fiasco: Why Referees Are Like Chicago Teachers

At the heart of America's most visible, least consequential labor dispute is a familiar issue: pay for performance

Odd Jobs: Anger Room Proprietor

A room in Dallas where customers pay to smash their frustrations away

When Moms Who Run Businesses Take Maternity Leave

Marissa Mayer's plan to "work throughout" her brief maternity leave sparked vigorous debate. Absent much of the discussion: how entrepreneurs juggle their newborns and their work

Inside China's Star-Making Machine

The Chinese government wants to create a pop star who'll outshine its dissidents on the world stage. Enter Ruhan Jia

Three Bailout Kingpins Make Good in the Private Sector

Jim Millstein, Harry Wilson, and Ron Bloom flourish after government service

More Dismal Science for Would-Be Entrepreneurs

Teaching entrepreneurship is a growth business for B-schools. Much of the curriculum probably isn't as useful as basic microeconomics would be

Computers

Live-Blogging Hitachi's 100-Million-Year Storage Test

Hitachi has created a data-storage method that it says uses quartz glass to preserve information for more than 100 million years. We present a minute-by-minute account of the testing process

A Year After Durbin, Swipe Fee Battles Still Rage

Retailers, banks, and card networks are still grousing over how much is fair to charge for processing payments

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