From MARKETS Feb 21, 2013

More US lawyers move into the boardroom

Lawyer directors have seemingly changed companies’ performance

Gillian Tett/Frontline Q&A

The FT and the Frontline correspondent Martin Smith and producer Marcela Gaviria join for a discussion of Money, Power and Wall Street, the special investigation into the struggles to rescue and repair a shattered US economy following the financial crisis, being aired on the PBS network
Wrecking ball illustration by Shonagh Rae ©Shonagh Rae From LIFE & ARTS Feb 15, 2013

Are library books on borrowed time?

Since 2009, the New York Public Library has spent $1m on 45,000 ebook copies

From MARKETS Feb 14, 2013

EU’s FISH economies unsettle US investors

Unease on France, Italy, Spain and Holland has replaced ‘Grexit’

An illustration of a weathervane by Shonagh Rae ©Shonagh Rae From LIFE & ARTS Feb 8, 2013

Go west, east, north or south, young man

Big macroeconomic stories are now creating millions of little tales of microeconomic change

FEBRUARY 02: Rev. Jesse Jackson leads a march calling for an end to gun violence from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. College Prep High School to nearby Harsh Park February 2, 2013 in Chicago, Illinois. Hadiya Pendleton was a fifteen-year-old honor student at King School who was shot and killed while hanging out with friends on a rainy afternoon under a shelter in Harsh Park on January 29. A $40,000 reward has been raised to help find her killer. Pendleton was the 44th homicide recorded in Chicago for 2013. ©Getty From MARKETS Feb 7, 2013

Big companies can help fund small business

Development bank lobbyists want overseas cash piles taxed

Illustration depicting a virtual university ©Shonagh Rae From LIFE & ARTS Feb 1, 2013

Welcome to the virtual university

Today’s students can download ebooks, Skype with a tutor and watch lectures on an iPad in their dorm

Illustration by Shonagh Rae of a statue falling ©Shonagh Rae From LIFE & ARTS Jan 25, 2013

Davos take note: we don’t trust you

As faith in leaders has ebbed, people have put more trust in their peer group, defined as a ‘person like me’

From MARKETS Jan 24, 2013

Break a wall of silence on cyber attacks

Many companies are terrified of talking publicly about the issue

walkman illustration by Shonagh Rae ©Shonagh Rae From LIFE & ARTS Jan 18, 2013

Why no one’s listening to a Walkman

As Sony swelled in size and moved into endless new fields, a silo mentality set in and made it hard to keep innovating

From MARKETS Jan 17, 2013

Reality not politics dictates cash hoarding

There are practical reasons for keeping cash

From LIFE & ARTS Jan 11, 2013

Handwriting: a joined-up case

It is keyboards that really matter now in the global economy, not penmanship

From MARKETS Jan 10, 2013

Fed’s mapmaker charts central bank rethink

Independence from government may not always be a good thing

From LIFE & ARTS Jan 4, 2013

Chinese lessons for America

The idea of ‘learning’ from China’s politics is almost taboo, given the US’s reverence for its constitution

From LIFE & ARTS Dec 21, 2012

Are we prepared for a cyber storm?

The attacks are getting bolder. No sooner do cyber spooks manage to counter one hacking threat, than another pops up

From MARKETS Dec 20, 2012

Time to stop addiction to momentum trading

Hedge funds need to go back to investing basics

From LIFE & ARTS Dec 14, 2012

Let’s look at role models

Girls need to learn to evaluate media images on the basis of their brains, not the glossiness of their hair

From MARKETS Dec 13, 2012

Digital threat to Fed’s jobless target

Functions driven by technology are displacing many human workers

From LIFE & ARTS Dec 7, 2012

Growing old, Stones-style

If ‘pensioners’ can now dance so wildly on stage, might it be time to rethink the whole concept of retirement?

From MARKETS Dec 6, 2012

Watch out for the second US cliffhanger

Expiry of bank guarantees could trigger bond rush

From LIFE & ARTS Nov 30, 2012

The born identity

How about a debate among US leaders about the prospect of a foreigner running the Fed

ABOUT GILLIAN

Gillian Tett Gillian Tett is markets and finance commentator and an assistant editor of the Financial Times. In her previous roles, she was US managing editor and oversaw global coverage of the financial markets. In March 2009 she was Journalist of the Year at the British Press Awards. In June 2009 her book Fool’s Gold won Financial Book of the Year at the inaugural Spear’s Book Awards.

In 2007 she was awarded the Wincott prize, the premier British award for financial journalism, for her capital markets coverage. She was British Business Journalist of the Year in 2008. She joined the FT in 1993 and worked in the former Soviet Union and Europe, and in the economics team. In 1997 she was posted to Tokyo where she became the bureau chief, before returning in 2003 to become deputy head of the Lex column.

E-mail Gillian Tett
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