Insight and analysis of top stories from our award winning magazine “Bloomberg Businessweek”.
On this week’s episode of Idea Generation, designer Nicole McLaughlin takes us on a journey from her start as a graphic design intern to becoming a viral sensation on Instagram by crafting creative upcycled shoes. She also explains how she went on to create her own design courses while collaborating with brands like Reebok and Vans.
South Korea Proposes Bill to Protect Victims of Rental Fraud
Bed Bath & Beyond Files Bankruptcy After Sales Decline
German Public-Sector Deal Sees Pay Rise for 2.5 Million Workers
BOJ to Review Policies From Past Decades, Sankei Reports
Egypt Raises Social Spending, Food Subsidies to Offset Inflation
New Tiffany NYC Flagship Will Cater to Ultra-Elite Shoppers, Says CEO
Paramount Directors Agree to $168 Million Settlement Over Merger
Twitter Blue Ticks for Dead Celebrities Add to Verification Confusion
SoftBank-Owned Arm to Build Prototype Semiconductor, FT Says
UK Home Secretary to Have ‘Discretion’ on Deportation Rulings
Ukraine Latest: Anger at Chinese Remarks; Russia’s ‘Real Men’
Ken Griffin Gifts $20 Million, Life Lessons to Miami College
Billionaire Brin Sold Tesla Near Its Peak for New Giving Vehicle
Zendaya Returns to Musical Stage With Surprise Performance at Coachella
Fire Breaks Out at Disneyland’s Tom Sawyer Island Attraction
The Dollar’s Demise May Come Gradually, But Not Suddenly
Xylazine Spreads Faster Than Officials Can Act
Bud Light Takes the Cowardly Way Out
Sprite Is So Popular That Pepsi Launched a New Lemon-Lime War
Peak Gas Has Passed, and Higher Prices Might Be Next
La descarada trama que costó millones de dólares a Venezuela
Bud Light Marketing Executive Takes Leave After Controversy: Ad Age
Read Alito’s Dissent on the Supreme Court Decision to Keep Abortion Pill Available
A Canadian Businessman Spent $1 Million to Offset His Carbon Footprint
Top Cleaning Products Waste Water. Will Concentrated Versions Help?
NYC Subway Ridership Hits 4 Million For the First Time Since March 2020
The Precarious Professional Lives of the Instant Delivery Workforce
How the Dutch Mastered Bike Parking at Train Stations
Do Kwon Says SEC Is Out of Bounds in Pursuing Crypto Fraud Suit
Bitcoin Stumbles This Week After $30,000 Threshold Fails to Hold
A Closer Look at Bitcoin’s Rally Suggests the Depth of Demand Is Deceptive
Simon Marks and
Mohammed Alamin
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Sudan’s army and civilian politicians are discussing a potential power-sharing plan that would curb the military’s dominance of the economy and give regional lawmakers the right to veto mooted projects such as a Russian naval base.
A draft of the agreement, seen by Bloomberg, seeks to end the crisis sparked by an October 2021 coup. It would prohibit the military from making investments beyond the defense industry — potentially challenging the near-stranglehold that critics allege Sudan’s generals and associates have over key sectors of the economy, from banking to livestock and gold.