Latest from Christian Science Monitor | Money
- How much does the Senate health bill cost?
- This recovery is a sham
- If prices rise after an NBC/Comcast merger, is that bad?
- 2010: The year of the global insurrection?
- Global economies surge forward without the US
- New evidence indicates China may be Bankrupt
- How long will China support the US dollar?
- What to do if you overdraw your checking account
- Orange County sues Toyota. Can automaker get a fair trial?
- The Fed's Janet Yellen: Who is she?
- Consumer sentiment: Will Americans spend or save?
- Herbert Hoover was no deficit-cutter
- In Nashville, a new microfund for entrepreneurs
- If states can balance budgets, why can't national governments?
- Russia on the rebound
- Toyota owners seek to sue carmaker for lost value
- Old vs. new: Smart grid and real time electricity metering
- What else can we legalize to help the economy?
- Google’s public data: Much improved
- Does US have free-market healthcare? Hardly.
- Germans to debt-ridden Greeks: Sell the Acropolis. And a few islands.
- A lollipop on the subway
- Brazil’s worry: too much growth
- Council, inheritance taxes – the worst of an ugly lot
- Initial and continued jobless claims decline
The world’s next boom cities
Saturday, November 21, 2009If the last century was the age of economic globalization, expect the first half of this one to be the era of urbanization. By 2050, 3 out of 4 people will be concentrated in major cities or massively urbanized regions, many of them climate-change refugees from exposed agricultural areas. But as nations ...
...
Original article from http://features.csmonitor.com/economyrebuild/2009/11/20/the-worlds-next-boom-cities/
Original article from http://features.csmonitor.com/economyrebuild/2009/11/20/the-worlds-next-boom-cities/
Login to read full articles and enjoy our free features for members.
Related articles
feedraider "We Eat Internets" v2.0 a LAMP production by Jussi Vaihia
© 2006-2009 |
about |
blog |
help