Author of Globanomics. Jim has nearly fifty years of professional experience in the development of management information and analytical business decision support systems. Broadly disciplined with exceptional experience. Education includes an MBA from the Wharton School-University of Pennsylvania, ...
moreAuthor of Globanomics. Jim has nearly fifty years of professional experience in the development of management information and analytical business decision support systems. Broadly disciplined with exceptional experience. Education includes an MBA from the Wharton School-University of Pennsylvania, an MPA in public finance from Indiana University; and a BA in mathematics from Hanover College. As a young man, I served as a nuclear trained officer on a U.S. fleet ballistic missile submarine during the Cold War.
In terms of articles relating to finance, economics, and the markets I am writing exclusively for TalkMarkets. I have published novels of both fiction and nonfiction, including: Globanomics, Crush Depth Alert; The Sowers Seeds; Champion Standing, Before Monarchs Flap Their Wings, and The Cold War Submariner (1969-1973). Links to my last two books follow:
https://www.amazon.com/Globanomics-Freedom-Understanding-Jim-Boswell/dp/B09L3RC893/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1636467789&sr=8-6
The Cold War Submariner: Boswell, Jim: 9781661139339: Amazon.com: Books
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Latest Comments
Killing Some More Time
It is on my blog: Lesson Number Two in Globanomics. Talklmarkets would not publish it under their name so that is when i talked about what i could do with my own personal Talkmarkets blog--and that is what i am doing now.
I sent John McCormick, of the Wall Street Journal, The Second Lesson in Globanomics, and asked him to consider me for a guest contributer, opinion page, with Lesson Number Two in Globanomics.
I have a couple of other Wall Street contacts, but i thought i would give John McCormick, the one and only shot. I have no intention to try and publish it through any other source now or than my blog and potentially the Wall Street Journal.
It Is Easy To Overreact To The Chinese Coronavirus
I am sorry Ms. Tvergerg, but speaking as one with a Wharton M.B.A., we are far from going into a Great Depression. What you are proposing is music to our new leader's ears. If he decides to go back to business as normal next week, which sounds like what you are proposing,, it will be like dropping a nuclear bomb on the United States with our own free will. I think it is time for you to take your actuarial hat off and join the human race. Just my opinion.
It Is Easy To Overreact To The Chinese Coronavirus
Money over life. I see where your priorities lie. Let me be the first to say how sorry I feel for you.