Soon after economist William Lazonick became a fellow at Harvard Business School in 1984, the world he had studied for decades began to radically change.
Author: Michelle Celarier
The Top Ten Toxic Philanthropists
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is one of the most respected higher education institutions in the United States, and until just a few weeks ago,
Jim Grant Is a Wall Street Cult Hero. Does It matter if he’s often wrong?
An arcane Wall Street newsletter still printed in hard copy hardly ever warrants a cameo in a Hollywood movie. But that’s exactly what happened in The
How a Massive Ponzi Scheme Fleeced RIAs, Religious Groups, and Retirees
By the time Corinthian Colleges filed for bankruptcy on May 4, 2015, its fraudulent practices were well known. Trouble had been brewing for years: The
Why the CFO of a famously corrupt company is working for the government
Sam Antar likes to say that he has lived a life of crime. The grandson of Syrian Jewish immigrant merchants, he was 14 years old
Real Hedge-Fund Managers Have Some Thoughts on What Epstein Was Actually Doing
Long before Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty to prostitution charges in Florida more than a decade ago, his fellow Palm Beach resident and hedge-fund manager Douglas