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New York CNN —A stalemate in Washington could destroy a landmark tax deal that was painstakingly hammered out among 140 countries over the better part of a decade. Some analysts say that the United States’ inability to ratify the deal could lead to a tax war among the richest nations that would hit tech behemoths like Google, Apple, Meta and Amazon particularly hard. Canada recently implemented a local tax on the world’s largest tech companies, something the OECD treaty had sought to avoid. New Zealand has also said it will implement its own digital services tax on large multinational companies beginning in 2025. The FTC also said that documents showed that competing mattress suppliers would lose access to its most important retail channel.
Persons: Donald Trump, he’s, Manal Corwin, , Megan Funkhouser, won’t, Alicia Wallace, Economists, Ramishah Maruf, Tempur Sealy, , Foster Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Apple, Meta, Economic Co, Development, OECD, Biden, Republicans, Finance, OECD’s, Tax, Administration, Information Technology Industry Council, CNN, Bureau of Labor Statistics ’, Labor, Labor Statistics, Federal Trade Commission, United, FTC, Pedic, Sealy Locations: New York, Washington, United States, Canada, Zealand, New Zealand, Stearns
CNN —The number of available jobs in the US unexpectedly grew in May, signaling continued resilience in the nation’s labor market. Job openings jumped higher to 8.14 million in May, from a downwardly revised 7.91 million in April, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) report released Tuesday. While both hires and job openings rates (as a percentage of total employment) ticked higher for May, the quits rate and layoffs rate were unchanged. The labor market appears to be at a crossroads, Nick Bunker, Indeed Hiring Lab’s head of economic research, wrote in commentary posted Tuesday. But some Fed officials have noted that the job market has lost momentum recently and that it’s highly unclear whether it will continue to hold steady or weaken further.
Persons: Economists, , ” Robert Frick, switchers, David Tinsley, Nick Bunker, ” Bunker, , you’ve, Austan Goolsbee, ” Marisa DiNatale Organizations: CNN, Bureau of Labor Statistics ’, Labor, Navy Federal Credit Union, Industries, Bank of America, Bank of America Institute, , Federal Reserve, Chicago Fed, Bloomberg, European Central Bank, Moody’s, Labor Statistics Locations: Sintra , Portugal
The Youngest Pandemic Children Are Now in School, and StrugglingThe pandemic’s babies, toddlers and preschoolers are now school-age, and the impact on them is becoming increasingly clear: Many are showing signs of being academically and developmentally behind. But the impact on the youngest children is in some ways surprising: They were not in formal school when the pandemic began, and at an age when children spend a lot of time at home anyway. Researchers said several aspects of the pandemic affected young children — parental stress, less exposure to people, lower preschool attendance, more time on screens and less time playing. The youngest students’ performance is “in stark contrast” to older elementary school children, who have caught up much more, the researchers said. Sarrah Hovis, a preschool teacher in Roseville, Mich., has seen plenty of the pandemic’s impact in her classroom.
Persons: ” “, , , Jaime Peterson, , Joel Ryan, Kristen Huff, Catherine Monk, ” David Feldman, Tommy Sheridan, don’t, Michaela Frederick, She’s, weren’t, Aaron Hardin, Frederick, Lissa O’Rourke, Sarrah, ” Terrance Anfield, children’s, Rahil, Briggs, Zero, Kelsey Schnur, Finley, Schnur, Analilia Sanchez, lockdowns, Heidi Tringali, Travis Dove, Tringali, I’m, Michael LoMedico, Emily Sampley, It’s, Dani Dumitriu Organizations: , Oregon Health, Science University, Curriculum Associates, Columbia, Start, Brook Allen, The New York Times, Associates, Cincinnati Public Schools, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, The New York Locations: School, Washington State, U.S, St, Petersburg, Fla, Martin , Tenn, Sharon, Tenn, Augustine, Cincinnati, Roseville, Mich, , Indianapolis, Sharpsville, Pa, El Paso, Charlotte, N.C, Yonkers, N.Y, Sioux Falls, S.D, Tennessee, Oregon
Inflation’s Wild Ride
  + stars: | 2024-06-26 | by ( Jeanna Smialek | Karl Russell | Lazaro Gamio | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +4 min
Coming into and through 2019, the economy was strong and the Consumer Price Index, a key measure of inflation, was low. For some, that seemed like a bad thing — economists worried that chronically low inflation could increase the risk of future economic stagnation. The Personal Consumption Expenditures index, a slightly delayed price measure that the Fed uses for its 2 percent inflation target, similarly fell. Within a few months, inflation began to pick up. Price jumps began to moderate even in service categories, which made economists hope that the deceleration might be the real deal.
Persons: , Biden, Donald J, Trump, Price, ” Jerome H, Powell, ” Mr Organizations: Fed, Consumer, Federal Locations: Covid, Ukraine, blowups
Melissa & Doug had a situation. For decades, the American toy brand had leaned heavily on factories in China to make its products — wooden puzzles, stuffed animals, play mats. Melissa & Doug was eager to shift some production to other countries. The Melissa & Doug executive was surprised to see that the plant could make high-quality wooden toys, at prices comparable to those in China. Late last year, Sunlord completed its first batch of products for Melissa & Doug, a modest order of about 10,000 items, and now is cranking out 25,000 per month.
Persons: Melissa, Doug, Donald J, Trump, Biden, Sunlord Locations: China, Washington, Beijing, Greater Noida, New Delhi
Skyline, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam John Harper | Photodisc | Getty ImagesSoutheast Asia has emerged as a top choice for firms looking to diversify production away from China, including Chinese companies, amid escalating tensions between Washington and Beijing. "Southeast Asia is well-placed to benefit significantly from the China+1 phenomenon as both foreign and Chinese companies diversify their supply chains and operations," said Kuo-Yi Lim, co-founder and managing partner of Southeast Asian venture capital firm Monk's Hill Ventures. "The ASEAN-6 region has benefited from a diversification of global and regional supply chain as well as the adoption of 'China+1' strategies. MalaysiaMalaysia has seen semiconductor firms including Intel, GlobalFoundries and Infineon setting up or expanding operations in the country over the last few years amid U.S.-China tensions. Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD plans to start commercial production of EVs in Indonesia in 2026, according to local reports.
Persons: Vietnam John Harper, Kuo, Yi Lim, Lim, Yinglan Tan, Kai Wei Ang, CNBC's, It's, Ang, Anders C, Johansson, , Sokon – Organizations: Photodisc, Getty, Monk's Hill Ventures, ASEAN, Hong Kong SAR, Apple, Ventures Partners, Samsung, BofA Securities, Intel, GlobalFoundries, Infineon, U.S, Monk's Hill Ventures . Industry, Malaysia that's, Stockholm China Economic Research, Stockholm School of Economics, Chery, Singapore Locations: Chi Minh City, Vietnam, Asia, China, Washington, Beijing, Monk's, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Singapore, U.S, Japan, European Union, China & Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Vietnam Vietnam, ASEAN, Malaysia Malaysia, Stockholm China, EVs
Food hoarding can vary depending on the access the person has to buying food, Daigle said. It is interesting to talk about food hoarding after the lockdowns of the Covid-19 pandemic, because food hoarding served a purpose in that time, Daigle said. Some people engaging in food hoarding behaviors may isolate out of shame or feel more comfortable being around food versus being out in public. Some eating disorders have food hoarding as part of their behaviors, and the same experience may drive people to cope with both hoarding and eating disorder behaviors, she said. But shortages of other things children need may also lead to food hoarding, Daigle said.
Persons: Kimi Ceridon, Ceridon, “ We’ve, , Kate Daigle, Alexis Conason, Daigle, “ It’s, ” Daigle, , Erin Rhinehart, ” Rhinehart, you’re, ” Conason, it’s Organizations: CNN, International, Susquehanna University Locations: Boston, Denver, York, Selinsgrove , Pennsylvania
Last year was “another year of highs in our energy hungry world,” said Juliet Davenport, president of the Energy Institute. Overall, the proportion of fossil fuels in the 2023 global energy mix remained largely the same at 81.5%, down just 0.5% from the previous year. India’s fossil fuel consumption was up 8% last year and, for the first time ever, the country used more coal than Europe and North America, combined. Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesIn China, fossil fuel use soared to a new record high in 2023, up by 6%, as the end of its extended Covid lockdowns led to a rebound in fossil fuels. Fossil fuel use in major advanced economies is likely to have peaked and is beginning to fall, it found.
Persons: , Sharma, Anthony Behar, SIPPL, , Juliet Davenport, Dhiraj Singh, lockdowns, Simon Varley, Dave Jones Organizations: CNN, Energy Institute, Getty, , US, Bloomberg, Resources, KPMG Locations: Mecca, Saudi Arabia, India, New Delhi, Queens, New York City, NY, Europe, North America, Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, China, Paris
Read previewNorth Korea and South Korea have been fueling opposite sides of the war in Ukraine, positioning themselves as players in this conflict. Coming out of pandemic lockdowns, North Korea is navigating international relations to find the situations that are most advantageous for it. The agreement details are not clear, but it appears that South Korea sent ammo to replenish US stockpiles, which was then sent to Ukraine. STR via Getty ImagesBoth North Korea and South Korea also have ideological reasons to be involved in the war in Ukraine. South Korea has long had close trade relationships with China in particular and remains concerned about how Russia could influence or empower North Korea, risking war on the peninsula.
Persons: , aren't, Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong Un, Yoon, Chris Park, Burke, it's, Caesar, LIONEL BONAVENTURE, Getty Images Kim, Putin's, Kim, Donald Trump, Nancy Pelosi, Putin, Wolfgang Schwan, Mark Cancian, Cancian, Kim Il, Park Organizations: Service, Business, North, Arleigh, Center for Strategic, International Studies, CSIS, South, Getty Images, Russia, Getty, Marine, Korean Central News Agency, North Korea — Locations: Korea, South Korea, Ukraine, Russia, Pyongyang, Russian, United States, North Korea, Europe, Ukrainian, Tarbes, France, North, Hanoi, China, Taiwan, Moscow, Korean, Donetsk Oblast, Anadolu, Park, Iran
"Truth is, I think it was the pandemic that did us in," 91-year-old owner Marilyn Leviton told KTLA-5. California's $20 minimum wage for fast-food workers and a need for new equipment also led to the restaurant's closure, she said. AdvertisementBeef sandwich chain Arby's has closed its restaurant on Hollywood's Sunset Boulevard after 55 years of operating under one owner. California raised its minimum wage for workers at quick-service restaurant chains to $20 an hour in April — 25% more than the state's general minimum wage. Speaking about the closure of her restaurant, Leviton said: "I'm awfully sorry that it came to this."
Persons: Marilyn Leviton, , Leviton, Rich Fury, Arby's Organizations: KTLA, Service, Local, Business Locations: California,
When consumer sentiment falters or the economy starts to teeter, RV sales follow suit, said Michael Hicks, an economics professor at Ball State University and director of Indiana University’s Center for Business and Economic Research. “People don’t make these large, luxury purchases unless they’re actually feeling better about the economy,” said Hicks, who follows the RV industry closely. “It’s so sensitive to interest rate changes, which often precede a downturn.”A Winnebago travel trailer at Motor Sportsland RV dealership in Salt Lake City on April 6, 2020. Nika Shneyder and her father and business partner, Alex Shneyder, standing by a Chill RV in Malibu RV Park, California, in 2019. They moved down to a historically strong, but noticeably smaller, 493,000 the next year, according to data from the RV Industry Association.
Persons: That’s, Nika Shneyder, “ We’re, ” Shneyder, , Michael Hicks, , Hicks, George Frey, bode, ” Michael J, Happe, hasn’t, We’ve, we’ve, Covid, Alex Shneyder, Nika, they’d, Monika Geraci, David Titus, Ty Wright, there’s, Ball State’s Hicks, ’ Titus, they’re, we’ll, Titus, ” Titus Organizations: CNN, Ball State University, Indiana University’s Center for Business, Economic Research, Bloomberg, Getty, Winnebago Industries, RV Industry, Dealers, RVs, Consumers, HL Enterprise, Manufacturing, of Labor Statistics Locations: Los Angeles, teeter, Salt Lake City, YOLO, Malibu, , California, Elkhart , Indiana, The Northern Indiana, South Bend, Elkhart, , Elkhart .
Insider Today: Travel agents are back
  + stars: | 2024-06-16 | by ( Joi-Marie Mckenzie | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
This week's dispatchRob McElhenney is Business Insider's June 2024 digital cover star. Edmon de Haro for BITravel agents are backFollowing the pandemic-era lockdowns, people are hungry for travel. The interest in having someone else plan a vacation is returning travel agents to their '90s glory. How travel agents came roaring back. Art Wager/Getty ImagesEveryone's moving to TexasMovers from all corners of the US are flocking to Celina, Texas, a small town about 41 miles north of Dallas.
Persons: , Rob McElhenney, Sheryl Nields, Rob McElhenney's, Rob McElhenney breezed, would've, McElhenny, Samantha Rollins, Lucia Moses, Ryan Reynolds, McElhenney, Rob it's, de Haro, Zers, Z, Wager, Chelsea Jia Feng, Uma Naidoo, Naidoo, Liam Daniel, we're, Dev Patel's Organizations: Service, Business, Wrexham AFC, Wrexham, BI, Texas Movers, Getty, Cunard, Food, Harvard, Vivid Locations: Bali, Philadelphia, Culver City, Los Angeles, English, Wales, Wrexham, Houston , Texas, Texas, Celina , Texas, Dallas, Celina
Tens of thousands of patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder nationwide could face disruptions to their care after two executives of a major telehealth company that distributed A.D.H.D. The Department of Justice announced on Thursday that the chief executive and the clinical president of Done, the telehealth company, had been arrested and accused of participating in a scheme to distribute Adderall and other stimulants for A.D.H.D. to patients who did not need the medications, and to bill insurers for these drugs. The charges come amid ongoing shortages of Adderall and another stimulant, Vyvanse. said that as many as 50,000 patients across the nation who rely on Done or similar telehealth platforms to obtain stimulant medications may be affected.
Persons: General Merrick B, Garland Organizations: of Justice, Centers for Disease Control
In its latest medium-term market report, titled Oil 2024, the global energy watchdog said oil demand growth was on track to slow down before ultimately reaching its peak of near 106 million barrels per day by 2030. That's up from just over 102 million barrels per day in 2023. At the same time, the IEA expects total oil production capacity to surge to nearly 114 million barrels per day by 2030 — a whopping 8 million barrels per day above projected global demand. The burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas is the chief driver of the climate crisis. The share of fossil fuels in the global energy supply has stayed at around 80% for decades, according to the IEA, although it expects this to fall to around 73% by 2030.
Persons: Fatih Birol, Birol Organizations: The International Energy Agency, Big Oil, IEA Locations: Monahans , Texas, U.S, OPEC
But Gen Z has a new target: Gen Alpha. Zoomers are starting to tease Gen Alpha tweens, saying they are stunted when it comes to socializing because of what they say is their addiction to screens. Nicholas Drake, a content creator, described the blue light stare as a "nonchalant, just unbothered look on their face." A TikToker called Hannah said she was recently served by a "Gen Alpha kid" and that the "blue light stare is so real." Terms such as "blue light stare," Varbanova said, "makes people feel more in control."
Persons: , boomers, Gen Z, Alpha, Gen Alpha tweens, They've, Gen Alpha, Nicholas Drake, They're, Zers, Katya Varbanova, Lyndsey, Hannah, Flora Wells, Brenda Christensen, Christensen, Wells, Gen, Varbanova Organizations: Service, Business, Stellar Public, Inc, Alpha Locations: millennials
Like Tesla and Palantir, GameStop was a popular stock to short among hedge funds, though GameStop took it to a whole new level. "That's how I feel about these GME posts that are using the 'P' and get in so we can cause an 'S' words that are no-nos." That was enough to make WallStreetBets the seventh-largest holder of GameStop stock, ahead of some of the big Wall Street investment firms that had shown interest in the stock. AdvertisementOn WallStreetBets, Alzmann shared the growing evidence that Cohen was indeed planning to take a more active role at GameStop. AdvertisementBut when Cramer dug into the conversation happening around GameStop on WallStreetBets, he saw that something new and more sophisticated was happening.
Persons: GameStop, Jaime Rogozinski, Tesla, Jordan Zazzara, I've, Zazzara, Ryan Cohen, Andrew Left, ahem Citron, PLTR, here's, Citron, We're, WallStreetBets, Uberkikz11, I'm, Ryder, Rod Alzmann, Bolt, Alzmann, Kitty, Roaring Kitty, StockTwits, lockdowns, Nathaniel Popper, Harper Collins, Cohen, Jim Cramer, manipulatively, Cramer, who've, It's Organizations: GameStop, Sony, Business, Twitter, Gamestop, Virgin Galactic, Blockbuster, Netflix, Citron Research, Research, Vanguard, YouTube, Roaring, Roaring Kitty, Owls, WSB, shits, GME Owls, CNBC, Virgin, Street Books, HarperCollins Publishers, Misfits Locations: sweatpants, Tampa , Florida
The Lost Art of the Negative
  + stars: | 2024-06-06 | by ( Ali Watkins | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Silvio Cohen has been doing this for years. Soak, rinse, soak, dry, repeat. “When I tell my friends that we still do developing, they laugh,” Cohen said. The finish is a different finish.”Cohen works at 42nd Street Photo, one of a handful of legacy shops in New York City that still develop film. But in this latest renaissance — born of Covid-era lockdowns — Cohen has noticed one of the practice’s most precious components has been lost.
Persons: Silvio Cohen, ” Cohen, , lockdowns — Cohen Locations: New York City, film’s
The five-day, in-office workweek is antiquated for a large share of workers, a relic of the pre-pandemic job market. "Remote work is not going away," said Nick Bloom, an economics professor at Stanford University who studies workplace management practices. Remote work is not going away. Nick Bloom economics professor at Stanford UniversityHis research suggests workers value hybrid work about the same as an 8% raise. 'Firms care about profits, not productivity'In addition, hybrid work doesn't appear to have any negative impact on workers' productivity, Bloom said.
Persons: Justin Paget, Digitalvision, Nick Bloom, workdays, lockdowns, Nick Bunker, Martin, Bloom, Bunker, it's, flexibly Organizations: Stanford University, Research, Finance, Employers, U.S, McKinsey, University of Pittsburgh
I've stopped making friends at work
  + stars: | 2024-06-04 | by ( Alexandra Karplus | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +8 min
Because the city has a large transient population, I've seen many friends and coworkers come and go — but even this has had benefits. I've made trips to visit my work friends in their new homes around the world. Work friendships started back in New York and are still going strongThese types of strong connections with colleagues didn't just start in Singapore. More than half of those surveyed said they'd met a close friend through their work or a spouse's work. I haven't been introduced to any of my coworkers' friends or partners, nor has my husband met any of them.
Persons: , Peter, he'd, I've, I'm, didn't, Jacques Torres Chocolate, lockdowns, they'd, Slack, Vivek Murthy, Murthy, haven't Organizations: Service, Singapore Botanic Gardens, Business, Global, Business Insider, Research, Survey Center, American, Associated Press Locations: Singapore, New York, Guildford, Bali, , Manhattan, Dumbo , Brooklyn, Bangkok
There is a focus on fake stories to influence attitudes on subjects like the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. But for the past year, the climate crisis has been the second-most targeted subject, according to the European Digital Media Observatory (EDMO). Official statistics, however, tell a different story: In 2022, renewables accounted for 23% of the energy consumed in the EU. The EU is considered a global leader in tackling planet-heating pollution, but climate disinformation could undermine the bloc’s ambitious goal to reduce carbon emissions by 90% by 2040, compared with 1990 levels. Its community standards policy in the past had only targeted video, but in April, it was expanded to include audio.
Persons: Morgan Wright, , streetlights, Paula Gori, , Gori, EU DisinfoLab, Wright, Gaizka Iroz, they’ve, “ They’ve, ” Gori, Pallavi Sethi, , , Facebook —, ” Wright Organizations: CNN, European Union, EU, Guardian, Bild, European Digital Media, Facebook, Getty, West, Grantham Research, London School of Economics, stoke, Services, European, Meta Locations: European, Russia, United States, United Kingdom, American, Europe, Germany, Ukraine, Gaza, EU, Spain, France, Biriatou, AFP, Africa, Asia, industrializing, Gori, Italy, Croatia, Poland, England, Grantham, Prague, Russian, Slovakia, Moscow
New York CNN —YOLO economy, meet the “yo, no” economy. In what was dubbed the YOLO economy (short for “you only live once”), or revenge spending, consumers shelled out for the experiences and goods they had missed. And that may be bad news for the economy. “We are monitoring the issue and engaging with market participants,” a spokesperson for the Securities and Exchange Commission told CNN. Joe Saluzzi, co-founder of Themis Trading, told CNN that the NYSE’s explanation is hard to square with the bizarre trades that hit the tape.
Persons: “ Covid, doesn’t, ” Sameer Samana, , There’s, , that’s, Taylor Swift, It’s, Dow, Jerome Powell, Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett, Joe Saluzzi, Themis Trading, I’m, Saluzzi, ” Read, Matt Egan, Keith Gill —, ” —, Read, Anna Cooban Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Wells, Investment Institute, Walmart, Target, Employers, TSA, Federal Reserve, New York Stock Exchange, The New York Stock Exchange, ” Intercontinental Exchange, NYSE, ICE, CNN, NYSE Group, Consolidated, CTA, Berkshire Hathaway’s, Berkshire, Securities and Exchange Commission, Themis, GameStop, AMC Entertainment Locations: New York, YOLO, Samana, , Berkshire
Read previewSam Mitchell, 64, has a yearly income of below $30,000 a year from Social Security. It's a very different way of life from the corporate real estate job he had 15 years ago in Austin making six figures and owning five homes. "I am making a fourth of the money I was making in 2008, but nobody is going to do it." AdvertisementMoving to New York and FloridaTo start life anew, he bought a farm in Peru and built a small house. AdvertisementOnce Social Security payments kicked in, he relied on the $900 a month to get by.
Persons: , Sam Mitchell, they're, Mitchell, It's, Keller Williams, Austin, Sancho Panza, he's Organizations: Service, Social Security, Business, Social, University of Florida, South, Southwest, Austin City, Austin Locations: New York, Florida, Austin, Ithaca , New York, Atlanta, Santa Cruz , California, Costa Rica, South Austin, Peru, Ecuador, California , Oregon, Washington, BestBuy
“The spicy trend is here to stay,” Sally Lyons Wyatt, packaged goods and foodservice industry advisor with market research firm Circana, said in an interview with CNN. Spicy plus sweet give you “Swicy.” And yes, brands are trying to make it a thing as they look for ways to stretch out the spicy trend. Starbucks in the spring also introduced limited-time hot honey drinks, made with wildflower honey infused with chili peppers, such as Hot Honey Affogato and Hot Honey Espresso Martini to the menu at its Starbucks Reserve roasteries and select US stores. Nestle has also trotted out recent spicy innovations such as California Pizza Kitchen’s hot honey croissant crust pizza, Stouffer’s spicy nacho mac and Hot Pockets x Hot Ones. “Americans have made cult-favorites out of condiments like Sriracha and hot honey.
Persons: ” Sally Lyons Wyatt, ” Lyons Wyatt, Millennials, Gen Z, Gen Alpha, ” Lyons, Gen, Martini, , Lyons Wyatt, Jennifer Creevy, WGSN, Jeff Gritchen, Alpha, Creevy, , ” Creevy, Mustafa Shamseldin, “ We’ve, Nestle, Primo, nacho, Varchasvi Singh, ” Singh Organizations: New, New York CNN, Walmart, Target, CNN, Starbucks, Disney California, MediaNews, Orange, Register, USA Pepsico, Foods, Pepsico, ” Nestle, Nestle, Tombstone, Mintel Locations: New York, America, Sonoma, Anaheim , California, Korea, , Tombstone, USA, North America, California
I'm a Gen Z freshman and I don't have a ticket to the sold-out club night my roommates are excited about going to. AdvertisementGen Z is one of the first generations who will be less wealthy than our parentsIt's not the first time Gen Z has defied expectations. As Business Insider previously reported, Gen Z is one of the first generations that will be worse off than their parents or grandparents. Gen Z appears to be less focused on the future and more on living enjoyable lives now. I'm an older Gen Z on the cusp of being a millennial, but this trend applies to some of the younger members of my generation, too.
Persons: , I'm, Brandy, Fingers, Kim Schewitz, Serena Vanderwoodsen, ceilidhs, Z, It's, we've, Gen, Gen Zers, they're, you'll, Gen Z Organizations: Service, Real, Business Locations: Brandy Melville, it's
Why job skills could make or break your next interview
  + stars: | 2024-05-31 | by ( Greg Iacurci | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
Nearly half, or 45%, of employers scrapped degree requirements for some roles in the past year, and 72% now prioritize skills over certificates in job candidates, according to the ZipRecruiter survey. The trend, which prioritizes a candidate's practical skills and real-world experience over formal education, appears to be "gaining momentum," according to ZipRecruiter. Meanwhile, hiring managers are being more explicit in job ads about the specific skills they seek in applicants, said Cory Stahle, an economist at the job site Indeed. What this means for job seekers"If the [job ad's] focus is on skills, the focus of your resume should be on skills as well," Stahle said. While skills should be "prominent" in such cases, that doesn't mean applicants should forgo traditional information, Stahle added.
Persons: Cory Stahle, Stahle, Indeed's Stahle Organizations: Getty, Harvard Business School, Glass, USA, Finance, Harvard Locations: U.S
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