Texas Schools Won’t Lose Funding For Attendance Drops During The Pandemic
In Texas, schools are funded based on the number of students enrolled and the daily attendance on campus.
Read MoreMar 29, 2022 | Business & Economy, State News
In Texas, schools are funded based on the number of students enrolled and the daily attendance on campus.
Read MoreMar 15, 2022 | Business & Economy
One of the core staples of the past 40 years, and an anchor propping up the dollar’s reserve status, was a global financial system based on the petrodollar – this was a world in which oil producers would sell their product to the US (and the rest of the world) for dollars, which they would then recycle the proceeds in dollar-denominated assets and while investing in dollar-denominated markets, explicitly prop up the USD as the world reserve currency, and in the process backstop the standing of the US as the world’s undisputed financial superpower. Those days are coming to an end.
Read MoreMar 14, 2022 | Business & Economy
For most of 2021 Federal Reserve economists and their PhD-wielding allies in academia and the media insisted inflations was “transitory” and would soon dissipate. By late 2021 economists began to admit they were “surprised” and had no explanation for the inflation. Now high-level economists have changed their tune again, with Janet Yellen admitting this week that “We’re likely to see another year in which 12-month inflation numbers remain very uncomfortably high.” And she was also careful to attempt the political damage control by insinuating that price inflation is a result of uncertainty over the Russia-Ukraine war. Sure. Sure it is.
Read MoreMar 9, 2022 | Business & Economy
It seems that government officials and central bankers are looking everywhere for a place to pin the blame for inflation except the one place they need to look — in the mirror.
Read MoreMar 5, 2022 | Business & Economy
PRICES SKY ROCKET .
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