The business forecast for 2023: An inflation rollercoaster and Elon Musk’s Twitter break-up
Predictions for a bumpy year ahead from the New Statesman’s business editor.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Elon Musk is a businessman, chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX, owner of Twitter, and has been estimated to be the world’s richest man. He was born in 1971 in Pretoria, South Africa, and after studying at University of Pennsylvania embarked on a career as an entrepreneur, co-founding Zip2, a software company that was bought for $300m in 1999.
Predictions for a bumpy year ahead from the New Statesman’s business editor.
ByThe perverse maths of wealth meant the Tesla owner lost billions by selling shares that made up his net worth.
ByThe stories and essays that had you (and us) gripped from start to finish this year.
ByThe New Statesman has uncovered evidence that right-wing accounts are being treated differently.
ByPolicymakers and experts on their policy highlight – or lowlight – of the year.
ByThis year saw the great humbling of the Silicon Valley billionaire – from Elon Musk to Mark Zuckerberg.
ByWhen Musk bought Twitter he bought himself the gift of insight, and realised how little he wanted it.
BySilencing the free press crosses a line.
ByFor tech CEOs, the suckers of the present come second to people of the technocratic future.
ByThe party has called for the scope of the Online Safety Bill to be expanded as it returns to parliament.
ByIf you give awful people the ability to say anything they like, you can’t be surprised when they say something…
ByThe EU commissioner warns that Elon Musk could be on the wrong side of her crusade against Big Tech’s dominance.
ByTwitter is $13bn in debt and losing revenue, but for the world's richest man even failure can have an upside.
ByWill Elon Musk turn Twitter from a dysfunctional social media platform into a new kind of digital dystopia?
ByEvery day Elon Musk dismantles the site free speech gets a bit worse for the activists who really need it.
ByStaff are worried. Users are in panic. The platform may not last much longer.
BySilicon Valley’s plight is fundamental to one of the biggest geopolitical questions of the 21st century: can the US maintain…
ByELon Musk has lost $100bn in 2022, and would shed an additional $44bn with the demise of Twitter.
ByTwitter’s wiring is being ripped out in real time, and the prospects for putting it back together are shrinking.
BySilicon Valley billionaires have taken up the ideas of William MacAskill, the leading voice of longtermism. But they will not…
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