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Thursday, March 11, 2010

Canadiens Score 4 In 3rd To Beat Boston (source: CBS News)

Posted by admin on March 2, 2010

Canadiens Pick Up Where Canadians Leave Off, Scoring 4 In 3rd To Beat Boston (source: CBS News) – News widgets and RSS feeds on Feedzilla.com

More Money: Friday roundup: part-time workers & waiting on estate planning

Posted by admin on February 5, 2010

Personal finance from around the Web:

  • The Federal Reserve policy of buying up mortgage-backed securities is widely believed to have kept mortgage rates close to record lows, but it's slated to end March 31. Now the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York says the Fed may reopen the program if interest rates spike or if the economy shows new weaknesses. [Washington Post]
  • The past decade has brought two painful bear markets. Here are the lessons you can learn from them, especially since bearish sentiment is at its highest level in three months. [Wise Investing, The Pragmatic Capitalist]
  • Need help getting a dinner reservation or a car to the airport, but can't afford a personal assistant? A new, free app iphone app promises to serve as a virtual personal assistant. [Bits]

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More Money Wednesday Roundup: Stock trades get cheaper & a miracle plane hits the auction block

Posted by admin on February 2, 2010

Personal finance from around the Web:

  • After just two years of a no-loan policy, Williams College reintroduces "modest loans" to their financial aid packages. [Inside Higher Ed]
  • Google-owned YouTube is testing the movie rental waters. Its first experiment, renting five indie films, netted $10,709.16 in 10 days. [Bits]
  • The U.S. officially crushes the competition…when it comes to racking up humongous amounts of credit card debt. See how other countries stack up in this info-graphic. [Man vs. Debt]

Follow More Money on Twitter at http://twitter.com/moremoneyblog.

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More Money Tuesday Roundup: Stock trades get cheaper & a miracle plane hits the auction block

Posted by admin on

Personal finance from around the Web:

  • After just two years of a no-loan policy, Williams College reintroduces "modest loans" to their financial aid packages. [Inside Higher Ed]
  • Google-owned YouTube is testing the movie rental waters. Its first experiment, renting five indie films, netted $10,709.16 in 10 days. [Bits]
  • The U.S. officially crushes the competition…when it comes to racking up humongous amounts of credit card debt. See how other countries stack up in this info-graphic. [Man vs. Debt]

Follow More Money on Twitter at http://twitter.com/moremoneyblog.

Add More Money to your favorite RSS reader. Subscribe at http://rss.cnn.com/moneyfeatures.rss.

More Money Wednesday roundup: Football star in tax trouble & pensions in danger

Posted by admin on January 27, 2010

Personal finance from around the Web:

  • The new New England grocery list: milk, eggs, and a house? Supermarket chain Stop & Shop has announced plans to open Re/Max real estate offices in 15 Massachusetts locations. [Boston Herald]
  • Pressed to boost their returns, public pension funds have started using leverage to increase performance. Critics say the strategy may be riskier than the funds believe. [The Wall Street Journal]
  • Losing a playoff game two weeks ago may be the least of concerns for one Arizona Cardinal. The IRS is going after Antrel Rolle for more than $2 million in back taxes. Rolle is suing the agency for failing to treat him in a "fair, professional and courteous manner." [Forbes]

Follow More Money on Twitter at http://twitter.com/moremoneyblog.

Meet The ‘Survivor: Heroes Vs. Villains’ Cast (source: CBS News)

Posted by admin on January 6, 2010

‘Survivor: Heroes Vs. Villains’ Cast Includes ‘Boston Rob,’ ‘Coach’ Wade (source: CBS News)News widgets and RSS feeds on Feedzilla.com

Economist: Don't waste money rebuilding Detroit

Posted by admin on December 2, 2009

Ed Glaeser has some fascinating ideas about cities — why some thrive and others don’t. Raised in New York City, the Harvard economist studies the economic, environmental and emotional forces that shape where we live and the price we pay for our homes. I interviewed Glaeser for the "Minds Over Money" feature that ran in MONEY's December 2009 issue, and we talked a lot about the forces that move real estate prices and what’s next for the housing market. (One of Glaeser's most provocative opinions: He wants the mortgage interest tax deduction abolished.)

When I spoke with Glaeser, I had recently visited Detroit for a story on that city’s surreal housing market – with unemployment in the city core nearing 30% and the auto industry in disarray, I walked into house after house that was selling for less than $10,000. Glaeser, too, had visited Detroit and has done a lot of work on the decline of what he calls America’s “older, colder” cities.

Glaeser's central point is that the country’s earliest cities developed around waterways, because those were the avenues by which people moved goods at the time. As transportation costs declined, proximity to water became less advantageous, so people – and commerce – moved to places where they actually wanted to live. In fact, says Glaeser, given how much less it costs to move things and communicate with each other over long distances, it's surprising that today we have big cities at all.

Clearly, though, the “city” has not disappeared and, in fact, not all traditional urban cities have crumbled the way Detroit has. Places like New York, Boston and Minneapolis have gotten bigger and richer. Glaeser, who’s working on a book called Language of Cities, explores why there continues to be such a strong link between urban density and productivity. And mostly it boils down to our very human desire to be around others. “One of our greatest gifts is our ability to learn from one another,” he says. “We work more effectively around human beings. Cities are essentially machines for making us smart.” The most successful cities, then, produce ideas rather than goods.

If that’s true, then how do we help cities like Detroit and Cleveland? Glaeser takes what many would consider a harsh view. Rather than spend millions on ill-fated attempts to create jobs or lure industry, those cities would be better off spending the money on social services and education designed to prepare its residents for good jobs – elsewhere. In economicspeak, focus on human capital rather than physical capital.

This kind of urban Darwinism has a certain appeal, especially after driving the bleakest, most devastated streets of Detroit. I thought to myself, how in the world can this place come back? But both Glaeser and I were struck by how much hope rather than despair the people of Detroit demonstrated. People love their cities like they do their families. If that were all it took, Detroit would already be on the road to recovery. If only it were that simple.

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Economist: Don't waste money rebuilding Detroit

Posted by admin on

Ed Glaeser has some fascinating ideas about cities — why some thrive and others don’t. Raised in New York City, the Harvard economist studies the economic, environmental and emotional forces that shape where we live and the price we pay for our homes. I interviewed Glaeser for the "Minds Over Money" feature that ran in MONEY's December 2009 issue, and we talked a lot about the forces that move real estate prices and what’s next for the housing market. (One of Glaeser's most provocative opinions: He wants the mortgage interest tax deduction abolished.)

When I spoke with Glaeser, I had recently visited Detroit for a story on that city’s surreal housing market – with unemployment in the city core nearing 30% and the auto industry in disarray, I walked into house after house that was selling for less than $10,000. Glaeser, too, had visited Detroit and has done a lot of work on the decline of what he calls America’s “older, colder” cities.

Glaeser's central point is that the country’s earliest cities developed around waterways, because those were the avenues by which people moved goods at the time. As transportation costs declined, proximity to water became less advantageous, so people – and commerce – moved to places where they actually wanted to live. In fact, says Glaeser, given how much less it costs to move things and communicate with each other over long distances, it's surprising that today we have big cities at all.

Clearly, though, the “city” has not disappeared and, in fact, not all traditional urban cities have crumbled the way Detroit has. Places like New York, Boston and Minneapolis have gotten bigger and richer. Glaeser, who’s working on a book called Language of Cities, explores why there continues to be such a strong link between urban density and productivity. And mostly it boils down to our very human desire to be around others. “One of our greatest gifts is our ability to learn from one another,” he says. “We work more effectively around human beings. Cities are essentially machines for making us smart.” The most successful cities, then, produce ideas rather than goods.

If that’s true, then how do we help cities like Detroit and Cleveland? Glaeser takes what many would consider a harsh view. Rather than spend millions on ill-fated attempts to create jobs or lure industry, those cities would be better off spending the money on social services and education designed to prepare its residents for good jobs – elsewhere. In economicspeak, focus on human capital rather than physical capital.

This kind of urban Darwinism has a certain appeal, especially after driving the bleakest, most devastated streets of Detroit. I thought to myself, how in the world can this place come back? But both Glaeser and I were struck by how much hope rather than despair the people of Detroit demonstrated. People love their cities like they do their families. If that were all it took, Detroit would already be on the road to recovery. If only it were that simple.

Add More Money to your favorite RSS reader.  Subscribe at http://rss.cnn.com/moneyfeatures.rss.

Video: Boston Woman Falls on Tracks, Saved (source: CBS News)

Posted by admin on November 11, 2009

Boston MBTA workers are hailed as heroes for their quick response to a woman who fell onto the tracks in front of an oncoming train. (source: CBS News)RSS news feeds and Widgets on Feedzilla.com

A 24-year-old savings junkie

Posted by admin on October 6, 2009

Question: I’m 24 years old and feel like I’ve become a savings junkie. I’ve already maxed out my Roth 401(k) contribution for this year and now I’m thinking about opening up an IRA too. I have no debt, and I have about $13,000 in other savings as well. What do you think — should I open the IRA? –Kyle, Boston, Mass.