Heartland Newspapers - Insurance and Finance

Young Adults Have Fewer Homes, Fewer Cars, and Less Debt

Young adults are carrying less debt than before the start of the 2008 recession, primarily because they own fewer major assets.

Federal Judge Sides With Motel Owners Against Justice Department

Property owners won a major victory when a federal judge in Massachusetts ruled against the U.S.

Fed’s Policies Expose Mainstream Economic Fallacies

At the annual meeting of the American Economic Association in San Diego (January 4-6, 2013), Harvard professor of economics Benjamin Friedman said, “The standard models we teach … simply have no ro

Report: Consumer Choice Key to Michigan Auto Insurance Reform

With no-fault auto insurance premiums that are among the highest in the nation, Michigan lawmakers should act to grant consumers more choice and to control the sky-rocketing cost of medical claims,

Private Insurer Assumes $30 Billion of Risk from Florida’s State-Run Insurer

The Board of Governors of Florida’s Citizens Property Insurance Corp. has voted to transfer $30 billion of hurricane exposure from the state-run insurer to Florida-based Weston Insurance Co.

One Reason Dollars Ain’t Worth What They Used to Be

 

Incriminating Emails, ‘Smell of Payback’ in Feds’ Lawsuit Against S&P

Standard & Poor’s is the only credit rating agency to have downgraded U.S.

Monetary War: The Latest Version of Protectionism

French president Francois Hollande’s statement that the euro should not fluctuate according to the mood of the market; the complaint by Eurogroup president Jean-Claude Juncker about the euro being

CFPB Wants to Know Impact of College-Marketed Financial Products

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is launching an inquiry into the impact of financial products marketed to students through colleges and universities.

The High Costs of Regulatory Enforcement

U.S. regulatory cost estimates of around $1.8 trillion per year encompass compliance costs paid by the public plus economic drag.
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