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Press USA Today

Half of Americans get financial advice from AI, but is it any good?

In a new working paper, assistant professor Taha Choukhmane and co-authors studied what Americans were asking AI about money, and what AI was telling them in response. Choukhmane and his colleagues asked 1,000 Americans to write out questions they might send to a chatbot. The researchers found that AI consistently gave better advice to people who asked better questions. "It might be that AI is going to be more useful for people who already know a little bit about finance and financial literacy," Choukhmane said.

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Press The New York Times

As Powell steps down, the Fed confronts 'regime change'

In 2020, former Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell unveiled a novel approach to policymaking, which involved temporarily tolerating periods of higher inflation to make up for past stretches when it was too low and to focus on "broad and inclusive" employment. "It was fighting the last war," said professor Kristin Forbes. "It wasn't thinking about how the world was changing and the bigger role of global supply shocks."

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Press Bloomberg

America is addicted to disposable work

Professor Emeritus Paul Osterman wrote: "Policymakers must address the US's reliance on disposable labor. Artificial intelligence is likely to expand the ranks of these workers, particularly in white-collar occupations, as more businesses can no longer be certain about their staffing needs. While not all workers need to be forced into standard employment, they deserve some minimum level of protection and benefits — that includes gig workers and freelancers, who often don't have any."

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Press Fast Company

The creative risk of letting AI do all the work

A recent paper by professor Sinan Aral and PhD candidate Michael Caosun revealed that the act of outsourcing tasks to AI erodes the very skills you're handing off. Workers who lean heavily on AI for writing lose writing fluency. Junior employees de-skill faster than experienced ones, who have the professional reserves to retain their capabilities. In the long run, "it leaves the worker worse off than if AI had never been adopted," Aral said.

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Press Marketplace

Why suspending the gas tax won't help consumers

Eliminating the federal gas tax won't make a meaningful difference when gas prices have gone up by 40% or higher in parts of the country, said visiting professor Gilbert Metcalf. Farmers already get an exemption from the tax. "If eliminating the tax leads to a little bit more demand for gasoline, then that's just going to drive up the pre-tax price, which will just hurt farmers yet again," Metcalf said.

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Press Noema Magazine

We may be entering a second Axial age

Senior lecturer Otto Scharmer wrote: "Being alive on this planet at this Axial juncture, where we can see the potential for both civilizational collapse and profound civilizational regeneration, and thus being part of a generation that has the opportunity to tip the balance in one direction or another, is perhaps the most meaningful gift anyone could hope for."

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Press Fast Company

How to say no without burning bridges

Lecturer John Richardson and co-author wrote: "Often, we end up making bad decisions to avoid the short-term discomfort of turning people down. Look, we agree — saying no is hard. The good news is that a little preparation and practice will make it easier. Even if you are one of those people that dreads it."

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