Good morning. Today, a New York Times budget memo, the price of drugs (legal and illegal) and the battle of the stand-up economists.
New York Times cuts all newspaper and magazine subscriptions (NY Observer) From the internal memo:
Sorry about this but the money we spent on these papers can be put to better use like paying freelancers. As always, thanks for your cooperation and understanding.
The cocaine problem at London banks (Bloomberg) Bonuses have plummeted but so has the price of blow.
“I was buzzing at work because of flickering screens, and I was managing lots of money,” Freedman says, as he smokes a cigarette and nurses a glass of water at a pub in North London. “When the market shuts, how do you keep that buzz going?”
Brownfields turn green (Daily Climate) Very smart:
Known as “brownfields,” old industrial sites and landfills that have been cleaned to a certain standard often languish for years waiting redevelopment. Most are already connected to the electric power grid, eliminating the need to build miles of costly transmission lines across pristine lands to bring the power to market.
Goldman’s CEO says the right things about risk (Financial Times):
It is not enough even that all exposures be identified. An institution’s assets must also be valued at their fair market value – the price at which willing buyers and sellers transact – not at the (frequently irrelevant) historic value. Some argue that fair value accounting exacerbated the credit crisis. I see it differently. If institutions had been required to recognise their exposures promptly and value them appropriately, they would have been likely to curtail the worst risks. Instead, positions were not monitored, so changes in value were often ignored until losses grew to a point when solvency became an issue.
How drug ads changed health care (NPR) NPR continues its series on how health care got so expensive.
Battle of the Stand-Up Economists (PBS NewsHour)
Actually, you weren’t the first, NewsHour. I interviewed him a year and a half ago.
There’s a lot happening in the world. Through it all, Marketplace is here for you.
You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible.
Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.