Business
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Out of office: microretirement is trending in the workplaceThe explainer Long vacations are the new way to beat burnout
By Devika Rao, The Week US Published
The explainer -
Will Rachel Reeves’ tax U-turn be disastrous?Today’s Big Question The chancellor scraps income tax rises for a ‘smorgasbord’ of smaller revenue-raising options
By Will Barker, The Week UK Published
Today’s Big Question -
US mints final penny after 232-year runSpeed Read Production of the one-cent coin has ended
By Peter Weber, The Week US Published
Speed Read -
Would a 50-year mortgage make home ownership attainable?Today's Big Question Trump critics say the proposal is bad policy
By Joel Mathis, The Week US Published
Today's Big Question -
How could worsening consumer sentiment affect the economy?Today’s Big Question Sentiment dropped this month to a near-record low
By Justin Klawans, The Week US Published
Today’s Big Question -
Gopichand Hinduja and the rift at the heart of UK’s richest familyIn The Spotlight Following the death of the patriarch, the family’s ‘Succession-like’ feuds are ‘likely to get worse’
By Will Barker, The Week UK Published
In The Spotlight -
Musk wins $1 trillion Tesla pay packageSpeed Read The package would expand his stake in the company to 25%
By Jessica Hullinger Published
Speed Read -
How Tesla has put Elon Musk on track to be the world’s first trillionaireIn The Spotlight The package agreed by the Tesla board outlines several key milestones over a 10-year period
By Will Barker, The Week UK Published
In The Spotlight -
Starbucks workers are planning their ‘biggest strike’ everThe Explainer The union said 92% of its members voted to strike
By Justin Klawans, The Week US Published
The Explainer -
The 996 economy: Overtime, Silicon Valley–stylefeature After work, there’s...more work
By The Week US Published
feature -
Why has America’s economy gone K-shaped?Today's Big Question The rich are doing well. Everybody else is scrimping.
By Joel Mathis, The Week US Published
Today's Big Question -
Being a school crossing guard has become a deadly jobUnder the Radar At least 230 crossing guards have been hit by cars over the last decade
By Justin Klawans, The Week US Published
Under the Radar -
Can Nigel Farage and Reform balance the books?Today's Big Question Nigel Farage has, for the first time, ‘articulated something resembling a fiscal rule’ that he hopes will win over voters and the markets
By The Week UK Published
Today's Big Question -
Is the job market frozen or faltering?Today's Big Question Layoffs raise alarms while young workers eye law school
By Joel Mathis, The Week US Published
Today's Big Question
