Samninganefnd Sjúkratrygginga Íslands og Læknafélags Reykjavíkur átti nokkurra klukkustunda fund í dag. Læknar hafa verið samningslausir síðan 2018. Ákveðið hefur verið að framlengja reglugerð um
Money Marketeers of New York University Webinar
New York, NY
For delivery on Tuesday, April 15, 2021 2:00 P.M. EDT
Introduction
I grew up in Missouri surrounded by three rivers. Nearly every spring, at least one of them would flood. Each time this happened, families, businesses, and sometimes whole communities, would be forced to higher ground until the water receded and returned to its banks.
Public programs were there to assist. Teams helped people evacuate, temporary shelters were stood up overnight, and financial support was provided for repairs and rebuilding. By many measures, these responses were a win, repeated successes of a system meant to insure against these types of disasters.
Date
01/03/2021
It has now been one year since the devastating effects of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic hit our shores, a year marked by heartbreak and hardship.1 We look forward to a brighter time ahead, when vaccinations are widespread, the recovery is broad based and inclusive, and the economy fully springs back to life. But we should not miss the opportunity to distill lessons from the COVID shock and institute reforms so our system is more resilient and better able to withstand a variety of possible shocks in the future, including those emanating from outside the financial system.