They say money can't buy happiness. But it can give you access to things many of us have no clue are even on the market.
California is nothing if not a land of contrast. It is a state of astounding economic might, yet it carries the highest poverty rate in the nation. It has more residents on the Forbes 400 list of ...
Economists find a growing gap in how Supreme Court justices rule for rich and poor. Here's what that means for businesses and ...
Today's New York Times reports on a new study by three economists purporting to show that the Supreme Court's decisions ...
Chávez and Maduro are not just leftists working up their class base. They also represent a majority excluded from positions ...
A new study has bolstered a scathing dissent from liberal Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson that warned the court ...
Venezuela holds the largest proven oil reserves in the world, estimated at roughly 303 billion barrels, yet it consistently ...
A wealthy medieval lord renounced his lands, his title, and his comfortable life to join the Knights Templar—an impoverished, ...
The study, called “Ruling for the Rich,” concludes that the wealthy have the wind at their backs before the justices and that a good way to guess the outcome of a case is to follow the money.
A new study found that the court’s Republican appointees voted for the wealthier side in cases 70 percent of the time in 2022 ...
Forbes and the Wall Street Journal are doing a better job than the Chron at covering how a tax on the very rich would impact ...
Sajjad Baloch is a Pakistan-based journalist and writer who focuses on politics, human rights, and regional affairs. He ...