Rob Carnilles (R-OR); Bruce Josten, Chief Lobbyist at U.S. Chamber of Commerce; Brett McMahon, Spokesperson at Halt The Assault join Neal Asbury on Made in America.
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Rob Carnilles (R-OR); Bruce Josten, Chief Lobbyist at U.S. Chamber of Commerce; Brett McMahon, Spokesperson at Halt The Assault join Neal Asbury on Made in America.
Finish Reading →If you’re following the financial mess in Europe, the U.S. economy in comparison doesn’t look that bad. Yes, the United States is suffering through its worst economic malaise in more than a generation but our entrepreneurs, small business owners and inventors are giving us hope by slowly getting us back on our feet.
That’s not the case in Europe, which is experiencing a domino effect as once financially viable countries are drowning in debt and are in danger of defaulting.
What we ...
Finish Reading →Last week, President Barack Obama asked Congress for authority to close the Commerce Department and create a new export agency.
Obama wants to put the office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR), the U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM), Overseas Private Investment Corp (OPIC), the Trade and Development Agency (TDA), the Small Business Administration (SBA) and parts of the Commerce Department under a new roof — something that has been kicked around for years.
As I point out in my book “Conscientious Equity,” ...
Finish Reading →Each week on Made in America, Neal gives his insight on the top news stories and their impact on the worlds of entrepreneurship, small business ownership and the overall economy. Unlike other talk hosts or pundits who only look at these issues through the prism of politics, Neal’s analysis takes a non-biased approach based on real life experience in business as an American manufacturer ...
Finish Reading →In 1976, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak decided to go into business assembling computers.
They had no money, but Jobs approached a local computer store, The Byte Shop, that had shown interest in their machine, but only if it came fully assembled. They would pay $500 each for 50 machines upon delivery.
Jobs then took the purchase order that he had been given from the Byte Shop to Cramer Electronics, a national electronic parts distributor, and ordered the components he needed to ...
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