Mar 30, 2016 // A new report by Dean Matthew Slaughter suggests skilled immigrants create new jobs and companies that ultimately help the economy grow.
View at U.S News & World Report
Mar 24, 2016 // Quotes an op-ed by Matt Slaughter in the Wall Street Journal, "We need to build a broader, more-responsive safety net to assist workers in transition regardless of the reason. For instance, unemployment insurance and trade-adjustment-assistance should become part of an integrated program that offers a menu of options t
View at Kankakee Daily Journal
Mar 24, 2016 // Matt Slaughter will share the findings of his new white paper, which includes an analysis of our antiquated immigration system's growing cost and impact on American businesses.
View at PR Newswire
Mar 16, 2016 // Matthew Slaughter says the four leading presidential candidates are wrong to say that foreign trade hurts America.
View at Wall Street Journal
Mar 11, 2016 // Matthew Slaughter says, "There is a constellation of policies that raise the likelihood that companies and individuals in the private sector can really be innovative."
View at Morningstar
Mar 04, 2016 // Matthew Slaughter comments on the latest jobs report. “The one big downside in today’s jobs report was poor wage growth,” he said. “In fact, hourly wages fell a little bit because the work week shrank a little bit. Weekly wages fell by even more and that continues to show that we are creating too few of the high-paying
View at CNBC
Feb 26, 2016 // Highlights a report Matthew Slaughter contributed to as an academic advisor. The report suggests that maybe we’ve been thinking of globalization wrong.
View at Washington Post
Feb 25, 2016 // Matthew Slaughter says, "While a robust investment in STEM education will help our economy in the long-run, we clearly need policies from Washington that support growth, not slow it."
View at PR Newswire
Jan 20, 2016 // Dean Matthew Slaughter discusses how the broader U.S. economy is on stronger footing, but how there are still concerns, especially regarding China's economic woes.
View at New Hampshire Public Radio
Jan 20, 2016 // Matthew Slaughter discusses the growth of the global economy and compares its current standing to the famous characters of Winnie the Pooh.
View at Marketplace
Jan 13, 2016 // Matthew Slaughter says that deep economic forces such as productivity growth, labor supplies, and public policies have more long-term impact on the global economy than exchange rates.
View at Bloomberg Business
Jan 12, 2016 // Concurs with a recent editorial by Matthew Slaughter that currency manipulation by China is not a threat to the global economy.
View at American Spectator
Jan 08, 2016 // Matthew Slaughter writes that movements in the yuan’s nominal exchange rate do not affect long-term trade flows or jobs in the U.S.
View at Wall Street Journal
Dec 07, 2015 // Matthew Slaughter weighs in on the lockout struggle Allegheny Technologies employees from the United Steelworkers workers’ union are engaged in over benefits and healthcare.
View at NPR
Dec 06, 2015 // Matthew Slaughter says, “Our goal is to prepare wise leaders to better the world.”
View at Poets & Quants
Dec 01, 2015 // Matthew Slaughter comments on news that China’s renminbi will be added to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Reserve. "When you're a kid, there is a moment when you cross that line of enjoying being with your little cousins to wanting to be at the grown-up table. The grown ups set the rules. The grownups decide what
View at Marketplace
Nov 24, 2015 // Matthew Slaughter is listed as the subject expert on the topic of fostering innovation and competitiveness.
View at Wall Street Journal
Nov 17, 2015 // Dean Matthew Slaughter shares his plans to build on Tuck's strong reputation and sense of community.
View at The Dartmouth
Nov 02, 2015 // Matthew Slaughter states, “The biggest thing we are focused on is articulating a fresher vision of where Tuck will be in the future. We need to think how in a world of MOOCs and other ways of transmitting knowledge what is the value of the physical space that we have.”
View at Financial Times
Oct 22, 2015 // Matthew Slaughter points out that only a handful of students will start a company upon graduation, most graduates will start off in a corporate environment to pay off debt and gain experience.
View at Economist