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November 15, 2020 Welcome to this edition of The Reader, a weekly roundup of our stories and insights.
What does a Biden administration mean for business? Here's what we know. The President-elect thinks the middle class and working class should get more, and the wealthy should get less. He has assembled a cadre of economic advisers whom he knows and trusts. He favors a larger stimulus package, like the one put forward by House Democrats. It’s unlikely he’ll bring the U.S.-China trade war to a quick end.Read on for more about Biden's economic inclinations. Clifton Leaf
MUST READ What a Biden administration means for business
Only in 2020 would CEOs welcome a new President who promises to raise their taxes, intensify business regulation, and massively empower labor unions.
BY GEOFF COLVIN NOVEMBER 7, 2020
POLICY
Meet the three people who will define economic policy for the next four years
BY NICOLE GOODKIND NOVEMBER 7, 2020
STIMULUS
What a Biden administration means for the next stimulus package
The Democratic President-elect made it clear during the campaign that he favored a larger stimulus package. BY ANNE SRADERS AND LANCE LAMBERT NOVEMBER 7, 2020
SPORTS
Free money, big addictions: Inside the booming world of online sports betting
The U.S. legal sports betting market as a whole already pulled in just over $900 million in revenue in 2019. BY BRETT HAENSEL NOVEMBER 15, 2020
MUST WATCH Dwyane Wade’s financial advice to the 2020 draft class
And how he handled his first big contract.
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More essential reads
From the archives
“Biden cuts right down the middle on income inequality, an issue that, according to a recent Brookings Institution study, is important to 90% of Democrats, second only to energy on the list of topics they want candidates to talk about. Biden isn’t as strident about using government to fix income inequality as Sanders is, but he isn’t perceived as being as tight with the big banks and other “one-percenters” as Clinton is.” —Joe Biden could be just what Democrats need, especially on the economy by Ben Geier, August 2015 .
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