Business | Bartleby
Is travelling to work always a waste of time?
In defence of commuting
Americans are “always in a hurry”, wrote Alexis de Tocqueville in “Democracy in America”, his opus published in 1835. Until the covid-19 pandemic, nowhere was this more evident in recent decades than in packed trains at peak times as people commuted to work.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “In defence of commuting”
Business August 27th 2022
- Firms’ unwise addiction to mergers and acquisitions
- “Game of Thrones” v “Lord of the Rings”: a tale of old v new Hollywood
- A drought in China hits industry
- Is travelling to work always a waste of time?
- South-East Asia’s tech firms take a battering
- A tidal wave of returns hits the e-commerce industry
- Could the demonised oil industry become a force for decarbonisation?
More from Business
Meet the ambitious wolf cubs of Wall Street
A duo of whippersnappers is taking on Goldman Sachs
What next for US Steel?
The faded industrial icon has few good options without a Nippon deal
Foxconn and other gadget-makers are expanding their empires
The world’s contract manufacturers are moving into new products and places
The signals of workplace submissiveness
Deference is all around you, unfortunately
America’s internet giants are being outplayed in the global south
From e-commerce to online banking, regional competitors are innovating rapidly
Will Mark Zuckerberg’s Trump gamble pay off?
He risks making enemies elsewhere