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Press Financial Times

Simon Johnson: 'Nobody needs as many white-collar workers as they used to'

Technology with the potential to drive innovation and help create new activities is currently viewed by too many companies as a means to replace workers — and young people are most exposed. That is why professor Simon Johnson has embraced an invitation from the UK government to chair a new AI Economics Institute that aims to help policymakers shape the adoption of AI so that it boosts wages rather than worsens existing inequalities.

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Press MIT Sloan Management Review

Resolving muddled objectives in corporate venture capital

Professor Michael Cusumano and co-author wrote: "Large companies seeking access to new technologies have been establishing corporate venture capital (CVC) units for many years. But returns on those investments can be erratic, and new technologies can be difficult for the parent company to take advantage of. Why do many companies struggle to derive adequate benefits from their CVC efforts? We think that at the heart of the issue is a persistent confusion over objectives that ultimately makes CVCs difficult to sustain."

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Press Fortune

Nobel laureate Daron Acemoglu on the 'brainless' AI discourse, the myth of capitalism, and the Gen Z revolution risk

Institute Professor Daron Acemoglu has a number for everything. The MIT economist estimates that roughly 0.55% in total factor productivity gains is what AI will actually deliver over the next decade, a fraction of Wall Street's euphoric projections. He estimates only about 5% of tasks will be profitably automated in the near term, equivalent to a 1% or 1.5% increase in GDP.

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Press Business Insider

The premium credit card trap

Research shows that consumers tend to spend more when using credit cards vs. cash. A 2021 study by professor Drazen Prelec and co-authors found that credit cards activate the brain's reward center and create an "anticipation of pleasure in the form of a purchase," comparing it to the smell of baked cookies triggering your appetite.

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Press MarketWatch

Inside the push to weaken Washington's toughest financial watchdog

Senior lecturer Robert Pozen and co-author wrote: "What's new here is the deliberate stripping of powers that the SEC long held. Yes, Congress can and does occasionally do this, but not the agency's own leaders, especially without advance notice or an opportunity for comment. The current SEC commissioners are consciously weakening the agency's leverage in negotiations with large corporate defendants."

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Press The New York Times

High gas costs may linger after U.S.-Iran deal

There are two reasons that gas prices could linger on the higher end, said Christopher Knittel, associate dean for climate and sustainability. One is the large amount of infrastructure in the Middle East that has been damaged or destroyed. The second is the uncertainty about whether sailing through the Strait of Hormuz is safe. "Basic economics tells us the riskier business is, the higher profits you have to earn to want to enter into that business," Knittel said. "Oil, gasoline, and natural gas have gotten more risky. That might actually keep us from ever getting back to prewar levels for gasoline," he added.

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