Digital Exclusives
The real estate market could be in position for a comeback, if policymakers in Washington don’t interfere, according to experts and alumni at the Wharton Economic Summit 2013.
The shale energy revolution is unprecedented. Its true impact could be far-reaching but not without (environmental) questions.
What is the proper role of government in encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship ... if any? A panel at the Wharton Economic Summit 2013 tackled the question.
Is more skin in the game—as prescribed by such business leaders as GE’s Jeff Immelt—what is needed to make American health care work?
Apollo co-founder and Philadelphia Sixers owner Joshua Harris, W’86, shared insights into the private-equity world with Penn students.
We see with our own two eyes how the Wharton School and Cisco have revolutionized distance-learning technology.
The Wharton SBDC is helping regional businesses promote exports and grow into distant markets.
The founder of the famous breast cancer foundation shared her experiences and insights with the Penn community.
The Barry & Marie Lipman Family Prize 2013 finalists have been announced.
Hedge-funder and economist Howard Kurz, C’79, ponders how unprecedented public policy has brought us to sequestration and perhaps closer to the next financial crisis.
BD’s Vincent A. Forlenza, WG’80, reports from the World Economic Forum about the future of health care around the world.
A Lifelong Learning Master Class by Prof. Stew Friedman allows attendees to wrestle with issues of leadership, life, work and community.
Professor Jonah Berger’s upcoming book upturns conventional wisdom about how to make your products, services and ideas “contagious.”
Bloomberg’s Robert Litan, W’72, shared his insights into Washington’s budget war, sequestration and other impending deadlines at a recent Wharton Public Policy Initiative event.
Anne-Marie Slaughter talked at Wharton about gender inequality and cultural change in the American workplace, and her article that started a firestorm.
To be wildly successful, you need to be right about something that no one else knows about, and other lessons from a king of venture capital, Fred Wilson, WG'87.