"The origins of the Federal Reserve System lie in an emotional debate, conducted more than 100 years ago, about whether the government should seek to affect interest rates – and support the credit of Wall Street firms during times of crisis – and, if so, how."
"The leaders of Russia’s top technology, venture capital and nanotechnology initiatives gathered at the Global Technology Symposium in Menlo Park, Calif., on Wednesday with the goal of deepening ties with the power brokers of the U.S. tech economy."
"What makes green opposition to its own cause so uncommon is that such interests already have their share of critics who argue that without generous subsidies, their fuels would not be economically viable."
"In 2004, when state and federal universities began implementing affirmative action policies, Brazil closed one chapter of its history and began another." -MIT's Melissa Nobles
"Is the Supreme Court going to end Obamacare? Why is health-care reform so unpopular? And how does Obamacare affect most Americans? MIT economist Jonathan Gruber, an architect of both Mitt Romney’s and Obama’s bills, breaks down what’s at stake as the justices debate one of the most important cases before the court in decades."
"The U.S. Senate Banking Committee voted to approve two nominees to the Federal Reserve Board on Thursday, although there was opposition from two Republican senators. The nominations of Jeremy Stein (an MIT alum) and Jerome Powell will now go to the full Senate, although the timing of the vote is not clear."
"Its premise, which Sperling embraces, is that in most new technologies, innovation happens most quickly and effectively when the inventors work close to the builders." - MIT and the Production in the Innovation Economy (PIE) initiative are referenced in this piece about manufacturing.
"At the crux of Tuesday’s debate was whether Congress has the power to require nearly all individuals to have insurance starting in 2014, and whether it has the right to assess a financial penalty for those who refuse."
"In a paper written last year for the Center for American Progress, a research and advocacy group, he (MIT's Jonathan Gruber) said the mandate could be replaced by a requirement that people 'auto-enroll' in health insurance but with the ability to opt out if they wanted to."
"Then came the call in 2008 from President-elect Obama’s transition team, the one that officially turned this stay-at-home economics professor (MIT's Jonathan Gruber) into Mr. Mandate."
"As he argued in a piece that appeared Monday in The Times’s Opinion Pages, Eran Ben-Joseph, a professor of landscape architecture and planning at M.I.T., claims that the world’s parking lots are deeply flawed."