Nevada Public Radio Banner
KNPR's State of Nevada About SON Archives Participate Specials
UPCOMING DISCUSSIONS
Not Ready To Serve
Nevada's Solar Future May Not Be So Sunny
The Rise Of China - A Neighborhood Perspective
RECENT DISCUSSIONS
Strife In The Sky
Can Eminent Domain Save North Las Vegas Homeowners?
Sen. Justin Jones Talks Background Checks
A Bad Bet: The Legislature Shuts Down Sports Kiosks
How To Help A Grieving Student
DOJ Expected To Join Negotiations With Arpaio Attorneys
X-Hunters Search For Secret History Of Air Force
Replacing James Guthrie
New Exams For Firefighters After Cheating Scandal
More Troubles With Las Vegas Constable
Tyrone Thompson, Replacement Assemblyman
What's The Future Of Las Vegas' Mets' Affiliate?
Flores Brings Personal History To Domestic Violence Legislation
Child Haven's 'Repeat Runaways' Found
Gun Bill Shot Down
Acting Labor Secretary Talks Immigration Reform
Small New Mexican Town Runs Out Of Water
Falling Lake Mead Water Levels 'Incredible Warning Sign'
Psychiatric Patient Describes Rawson-Neal Move To Bus Him To California
New Policy Will Send DA To Every Officer Involved Shooting
Business Schools and the Crash

AIR DATE:
LISTEN TO M3U | DOWNLOAD MP3

The mortgage mess and the foreclosure crisis were created by some of the best and the brightest, who came from top business schools. Those graduate schools think of themselves as incubators of the next generation of financial and economic wisdom but Journalist Philip Delves Broughton found that two years at Harvard Business School was really a Faustian bargain - exactly the kind of deal that would create the overconfidence that nearly destroyed the financial system.
Philip Delves Broughton, Author of "Ahead of the Curve: Two Years at Harvard Business School"

LINKS


Start the Conversation
Join the Discussion
07/27/09 RUNDOWN
UNLV'S Presidential Search
No Child Left Behind
Business Schools and the Crash
Retail Bargains
The Las Vegas Biltmore


© 2012 NEVADA PUBLIC RADIO   
Web hosting facilities provided by Switch.