Welcome back. Today we explore who’s bringing neckties back to the office and why so many American workers are looking for a new job.
About us
Winner of 37 Pulitzer Prizes for outstanding journalism, The Wall Street Journal includes coverage of U.S. and world news, politics, arts, culture, lifestyle, sports, health and more. It's a critical resource of curated content in print, online and mobile apps, complete with breaking news streams, interactive features, video, online columns and blogs. Since 1889, readers have trusted the Journal for accurate, objective information to fuel their decisions as well as enlighten, educate and inspire them. On LinkedIn, we will share articles to help you navigate your career, including stories from our business, management, leisure and technology sections. Subscribe: http://on.wsj.com/1n1uvCH Job opportunities: http://www.dowjones.com/careers
- Website
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http://wsj.com
External link for The Wall Street Journal
- Industry
- Newspaper Publishing
- Company size
- 1,001-5,000 employees
- Headquarters
- New York, NY
- Type
- Public Company
- Specialties
- news, journalism, business, and careers
Locations
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Primary
1211 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10036, US
Employees at The Wall Street Journal
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Peter Saidel
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Ed Zimmerman
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Louisa Bertman
Illustrator, Animator & Digital Media Storyteller | GIF Artist | Visual Journalist | Cyber Activist | Specializing in Human Rights & Social Justice…
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Brian Scudamore
Founder & CEO: 1-800-GOT-JUNK? and 2 other exceptional home service brands. Dragon investor on CBC’s Dragons Den. Bestselling author.
Updates
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Heard on the Street: Match’s first-ever analyst meeting this week was a chance to win back investors’ hearts. That didn’t quite happen.
Tinder’s Tough Love Should Ultimately Serve Match Well
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Millennials, once perpetually behind, are now suddenly wealthier than other generations were at their age. The turnaround has been so dramatic that millennials—mocked at times for being perpetually behind in building wealth, buying homes, getting married and having children—now find themselves ahead. “I have to pat Andy from 2010 on the back,” said Andy Holmes, whose early decisions helped set him up for a better financial future. 🔗Read more: https://trib.al/DZ2DUiW
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George Goognin is a part of an emerging group of unlikely renters: millionaires. While still relatively small in number, millionaire renters in the U.S. are on the rise, a reflection of how the calculus around homeownership has changed for even the wealthiest in the U.S. Read more: https://trib.al/e4E8xGU
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Venezuelan forces detained at least 150 adolescents amid protests against President Nicolás Maduro after he claimed victory in a disputed election.
Venezuela Never Had So Many Political Prisoners. 21 of Them Are Teens.
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President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to remake education in the U.S., pledging to exert more control over funding and lessons, to curb what he views as left-leaning tendencies at universities and even to dismantle the Department of Education. 🔗 https://trib.al/GW3PM1k
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Computer parts, vacuum cleaners, coffee and olive oil are among the goods being snapped up by U.S. consumers expecting tariffs to push up prices next year.
Americans Are Stockpiling to Get Ahead of Tariffs
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As prices in China spiral downward, companies are pumping out more goods to avoid losses, creating a vicious cycle that is eroding confidence.
Prices Won’t Stop Falling in China, and Beijing Is Grasping for Solutions
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An axis of autocracies led by Russia, China, Iran and North Korea is challenging the democratic world order, Yaroslav Trofimov writes.
Essay | Has World War III Already Begun?
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Mass deportations are the most prominent of President-elect Donald Trump’s immigration pledges, but a more urgent threat looms for millions of immigrants and their employers: losing access to legal work.
A New Risk for Employers: Losing Millions of Migrants With Temporary Work Permits
wsj.com