Succession is flawed but its portrayal of the rich and the motivations of those in media ring true.
Peter Oborne reflects on another damaging week for Boris Johnson and why he is effectively finished as prime minister of the UK.
The financial details and the appointment of corporate restructuring advisors revealed by The Currency this week raise serious questions about the future of the National Broadband Plan. They could have been addressed earlier if the project was not so opaque.
What would a series of rolling restrictions mean for us? The first order effects would include a stuttering, fluttering economy and a ballooning deficit just as interest rates are poised to rise. The second and third-order effects are much more difficult to foresee – and more troubling.
The conflation of the pre- and post-Lehman experience of the Western banking system and that of China today is flawed. The Chinese financial system and its relationship to the broader economy is fundamentally different by design.
Technology stocks have come to dominate the market like never before. But this year, there are signs of a sell-off. What's going on?
I may not need a subscription box to buy tampons, but I do need food, energy, transportation and healthcare. It’s time we started to move capital in the direction of urgent global human needs at scale, rather than looking for a quick return.
Marc Randolph agreed to step back as CEO of Netflix, realising his skills were better served elsewhere. It is a lesson that a lot of company founders could learn from if they want to take their business to the next level.
Pete Smyth talks to two of Ireland's leading musicians Danny O'Reilly and Cian MacSweeney about art and creativity in the time of Covid.
Cracks are appearing in the so-called green jersey structure used by multinationals to locate more profits in Ireland. In the meantime, it continues to yield an unprecedented bonanza at a time of intense strain on public finances.
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