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Tech jobs in US in high demand amid digitalization of economy WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. economy is coping with growing demand for tech workers, as the economy is becoming more and more digitized. Six in 10 tech companies said that they were short of technology skilled workers in 2017, according to a recent survey report jointly released by ...
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Next to kick off key high street trading updates; US jobs data also due Away from domestic matters, the last US jobs report of 2017, which will be released on the first Friday of 2018, should continue to show payrolls across the Atlantic growing strongly. In a preview of the data, economists at ING said that, following September's hurricanes, it has been hard to draw many ...
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US: Jobs growth looks set to edge back towards the underlying trend - ING Analysts at ING suggest that following September's hurricanes, it has been hard to draw many sensible conclusions from the past few US jobs reports, but ... "Jobs growth looks set to edge back towards the underlying trend (170k, give or take), but the Fed will be watching more closely for any signs of ...
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New Tax Law Won't Increase US Jobs, But It Will Introduce Rise Of Real Estate Value Trump's White House has been counting the newly implemented tax law as a win for this administration. However, the impacts are slowly coming in. A rise in housing prices in the United States can be expected in the coming year as the old tax code which subsidized homeownership has now been ...
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What Keeps Us at a Job We Don't Like? Our Work Fam In fact, the majority of U.S. workers would remain in a job because they are pleased with their "work family," a new study by Silicon Valley-based tech powerhouse HP Inc. shows. Some 75% of office workers identified people they work with as the top factor to workplace satisfaction. The office layout ...
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Why US companies' offshore cash won't rush back home A vast stash of cash belonging to American multinationals, estimated at $1.6 trillion, sits overseas. This is because high U.S. tax rates dissuade the companies from bringing it home. But the new tax law will attract a large chunk of it back home, boosting U.S. economic growth and jobs. That's the scenario ...
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10 Jobs You Want To Leave Biglaw For, But Shouldn't Matt Ritter is a Director based in California where he focuses on moving partners and associates into prominent positions with elite firms and companies throughout the U.S., with a focus on the California and New York markets. Matt has a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania and was a corporate ...
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US Aims To Reduce Yemen Casualties WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary James Mattis said Friday the U.S. is determined to reduce the number of civilian casualties in the Saudi-led campaign against rebels in Yemen and will press ahead with efforts to train Saudi pilots to identify legitimate targets. His comments to reporters at the ...
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'It's about our dignity': vintage clothing ban in Rwanda sparks US trade dispute The association lobbied for the US to review the countries' eligibility, arguing that the ban imperils 40,000 US jobs. "We are very concerned if this ban stays that could set a precedent for some of these other countries to say, 'OK, they've banned secondhand clothes – maybe we should ban [them] too,'" ...
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GUEST COLUMN: Trump, trade and the China syndrome U.S. government trade efforts focused on thwarting Japan, and in an ancillary manner Mexico, whose low labor prices were (supposedly) producing a "vast sucking sound," in Ross Perot's words, pulling U.S. jobs south of the Rio Grande. But while America was focused on Japan and Mexico, China, ...
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