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Paul Jackson

New York

Publisher and Editor at The Harlem Times

As the publisher of the newly revamped Harlem Times and Harlem Estates News, my mission is to spread the news of economic development to the benefit of all.

Articles

  • Jan 18, 2025 | msn.com | Paul Jackson |Craig Stirling

    Continue reading More for You   Continue reading More for You

  • Jan 18, 2025 | financialpost.com | Paul Jackson |Craig Stirling

    After decades of weak prices and feeble economic growth, Japan appears close to achieving stable inflation with solid wage growth, enabling the BOJ to push borrowing costs up toward levels seen in other major economies. Some 90% of economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month said prices and economic conditions warrant an increase in rates from 0.25%. Of the surveyed economists, about three-quarters expect the central bank to move this week.

  • Nov 21, 2024 | b2bcentral.co.za | Paul Jackson

    By Paul Jackson, CEO, TUHFHaving been part of TUHF’s leadership for more than two decades, I feel compelled to address the critical issue of affordable housing investment, and particularly how it relates to urban sprawl. Our simple thesis is this: investing in affordable housing within cities is key to stimulating economic growth and producing positive fiscal outcomes. Our research shows a staggering backlog of 3.7 million affordable housing units across cities and townships.

  • Nov 10, 2024 | thenewsmotion.com | Paul Jackson

    A 6.8 significance earthquake struck off the coast of japanese Cuba on Sunday, causing cloth harm in several regions because the island keeps to get over giant blackouts and the effect of hurricanes over the past few weeks. The earthquake changed into pronounced approximately 39 km (24 miles) south of Bartolomé Masó earlier than noon local time, approximately an hour after a five.Nine value quake rocked the place, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) said.

  • Oct 27, 2024 | yahoo.com | Paul Jackson |Alastair Gale

    (Bloomberg) -- Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba must quickly cobble together additional support for his administration if he is to survive as leader, following the first defeat for the ruling coalition since 2009. Most Read from BloombergIshiba’s decision to call a snap election before he had even become prime minister proved to be a bad gamble on a potential popularity bump for a new leader.

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Paul Jackson
Paul Jackson @tony_harl
12 Sep 11

@RumsfeldOffice so what's the big news?