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Purchasing a skill-based product can be self-defeating
The latest Inland Empire Business Activity Index shows business activity in the region continuing its upward climb with the local construction industry making key contributions
A decade after the recession of 2008, the region is home to the fastest job growth in Southern California and is the most improved among the major surrounding metro areas
Disruptive startups attract investors quickly but receive less money than their more conventional counterparts
Riverside outranks the better-known entrepreneurship hotspot of San Jose
Trade activity strong to date but future outlook cloudy
The UCR School of Business is the premier public business research institution in Inland Southern California and provides insights and resources that impact the development of the region
Building and construction spending, permitting rises as home demand intensifies
Matt D. Lyons ’87, Byron Pollitt ’73, and William E. Thomas will serve for the 2018 -19 academic year
At the 10-year anniversary of the Great Recession a new analysis looks at where the market has been and where it’s headed next
UCR School of Business report suggests eventually growth will be constrained by labor shortages caused by the state’s high cost of living
This spring, a University of California, Riverside delegation traveled 6,698 miles west to Guangzhou, Guangdong, and Anhui Province in eastern China to strengthen UCR’s relationships with the region’s top educators, researchers, and government officials. Across the Pacific Ocean, Chancellor Kim A. Wilcox and Kelechi Kalu, vice provost of International Affairs...
Latest data show IE home prices are fastest growing in Southern California
UCR School of Business report also forecasts limits to future growth due to a tightening labor market in the region and beyond
UCR professor evaluates emerging business strategy in updated academic paper
UCR researcher and colleagues show that businesses in states with confluence of research universities, venture capital, and government funding innovate at 16-times higher rate when demand increases
UC Riverside business professor says concrete vocabulary can build trust among analysts