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The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse – and recognition of the vital role that academic experts can play in the public arena. Independent and not-for-profit, it is part of a global network of newsrooms first launched in Australia ...more

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Does A New Study Really Show That Hydroxychloroquine Might Be Effective Against Omicron?
Hydroxychloroquine, the anti-malaria drug controversially touted as a cure for COVID despite a lack of robust evidence, is creating renewed interest as a potential treatment for omicron.
Inflation, Workforce Participation And Real Wages: 3 Key Indicators For Monitoring The Economy In 2022
The U.S. economy ended 2021 with a lot of uncertainty. Inflation surged to levels not seen since the 1980s, seriously eroding consumer purchasing power, while the highly contagious omicron variant forced many Americans to hunker down.
What Is The Fed Taper? An Economist Explains
An economist explains how the Federal Reserve withdraws stimulus from the economy.
Why The Oil Industry’s Pivot To Carbon Capture And Storage – While It Keeps On Drilling – Isn’t A Climate Change solution
After decades of sowing doubt about climate change and its causes, the fossil fuel industry is now shifting to a new strategy: presenting itself as the source of solutions.
Why Are Prices So High? Blame The Supply Chain – And That’s The Reason Inflation Is Here To Stay
Consumer prices soared in October 2021 and are now up 6.2% from a year earlier – higher than most economists’ estimates and the fastest increase in more than three decades.
Congress Passes $1t Infrastructure Bill – How Does The Government Spend That Much Money?
There’s funding for cybersecurity, clean water and waste treatment systems, broadband internet connections and more. The bill is the largest investment in the nation’s infrastructure in decades.
The Fed Tapers Its Support For Bond Markets And The Economy – 5 Questions Answered About What That Means
Higher interest rates – whether as a result of the Fed’s buying fewer assets or the market’s simply anticipating higher rates – would of course increase the cost of borrowing for mortgages and cars loans, which in turn can slow economic activity.
Does Raising The Minimum Wage Kill Jobs?
Only by studying how humans actually behave can economics hope to make meaningful predictions about how a policy change like increasing the minimum wage is likely to affect the behavior of the economy.
4 Reasons Americans Are Still Seeing Empty Shelves And Long Waits
Shortages of virtually every type of product from toilet paper and sneakers to pickup trucks are showing up across the country. Need a book, bicycle, baby crib or boat? You may have to wait weeks or months longer than usual to get your hands on it.
The Internet Archive Has Been Fighting For 25 Years To Keep What’s On The Web From Disappearing
This year the Internet Archive turns 25. It’s best known for its pioneering role in archiving the internet through the Wayback Machine, which allows users to see how websites looked in the past.
Forget The American Dream – Millions Of Working Americans Still Can’t Afford Food And Rent
For millions of working Americans, being employed doesn’t guarantee a living income.
COVID-19 Recession: One Of America’s Deepest Downturns Was Also Its Shortest After Bailout-Driven Bounceback
Thanks to a roaring economy, plunging joblessness and a consumer spending spree, it probably won’t come as a surprise that the COVID-19 recession is officially over.
The Next Big Financial Crisis Could Be Triggered By Climate Change – But Central Banks Can Prevent It
Today, there’s another looming economic risk: climate change. Once again, how much it harms economies will depend a lot on how financial regulators and central banks react.
Can ‘Viral Shedding’ After The COVID Vaccine Infect Others? That’s A Big ‘No’
COVID vaccines don’t contain any live virus to shed. Here’s the science to put the myth of viral shedding after the COVID vaccine to bed.
Bitcoin Alternatives Could Provide A Green Solution To Energy-Guzzling Cryptocurrencies
The cryptocurrency bitcoin now uses up more electricity a year than the whole of Argentina, according to recent estimates from the University of Cambridge.
Branson Vs Bezos: As The Billionaires Get Ready To Blast Into Space, Who's Got The Better Plan?
Over the next fortnight, Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos and Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson will take off into space, because they can, on spaceships designed by their respective companies.
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