
The case against a savings accountThe smartest way to offset the drag of inflation is to invest your money over the long term.The Wall Street Journal.
Trump's budget plan, by the numbersPresident Trump just released his budget plan for the next fiscal year, which proposes some big changes in government spending. Here's a look at what agencies are helped and hurt by the proposal.The Washington Post
New bank note for the euro zoneThe European Central Bank introduces a new 50 euro bill which the German central bank presents at its headquarters in Frankfurt. David Pollard reports.Reuters

The case against a savings account
The Wall Street Journal.0:48

Trump's budget plan, by the numbers
The Washington Post3:43

New bank note for the euro zone
Reuters1:14

Hyundai to recall almost 1 million Sonata cars in the US
Wochit Business0:33

Adding this natural element could increase the value of your home
CNBC0:49

How Trump has helped US businesses
Fox Business3:59

Arizona ranchers torn in support for border wall
The Wall Street Journal.5:53

The ultimate snoring fix: Two master bedrooms
The Wall Street Journal.2:10

Four indicted in connection with Yahoo hacking
CNBC3:13

Why the Fed hiked interest rates again
CNN Money1:29

Trump tax-return details leaked
The Wall Street Journal.1:21

Watch this robot now flipping burgers in California
Fortune1:13

Beer on Mars? Anheuser-Busch says 'yes'
Wochit Tech0:55

Wait, how does Yahoo have one billion accounts?
The Washington Post2:02

Is the US oil industry shooting itself in the foot?
Fox Business5:22

GOP's Obamacare replacement bill: winners and losers
CNN Money1:55
While it has been said for a long time that the U.S. is bleeding manufacturing jobs overseas, particularly to China, some businesses have been moving operations the other way round.
Quotes in the article
And now, the head of a leading Chinese glass maker making the same move has openly questioned if his country really is such a lucrative destination for offshore factories, reports Hong Kong newspaper the South China Morning Post.
Overall speaking, the tax burden for manufacturers in China is 35% higher than in the U.S., Cao Dewang told China Business Network in an interview. He added that a combination of cheap land, reasonable energy prices and other incentives means that, despite higher manufacturing costs, he can still make more money by making glass in the U.S. than by exporting Chinese-made panes to the U.S. market.
© Wang Zhou-Imaginechina
Cao Dewang, center, Chairman of Fuyao Group and Chairman of Fuyao Glass Industry Group Co., is interviewed as he arrives at the Great Hall of the People to attend the opening session for the Fourth Session of the 12th National Committee of the CPPCC (Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference) in Beijing, China, 3 March 2016.
His company, Fuyao Glass, has invested over $1 billion stateside, according to the Post, the most significant move of which is opening its U.S. factory in the Ohio town of Moraine, a suburb of Dayton, back in October. The glass maker is re-purposing the town's former General Motors assembly that had been standing empty since late 2008, as the Dayton Daily News reports.
According to Ohio TV station WDTN, the plant now employs a workforce of almost 2,000, and Cao expects that the fully operational facility will employ up to 3,000 workers.
Wage and transportation costs are getting higher in China, Cao says. Compared with four years ago, labor wages [in China] today have tripled, he told China Business Network. Meanwhile, transportation in the U.S. costs the equivalent of less than one yuan ($) per kilometer, while road tolls [in China] are higher, he added, pointing out that some mid- and small-sized Chinese enterprises have already started moving to Southeast Asian countries like Vietnam and Cambodia for cheaper wages and materials.
Fuyao is not the first Chinese business making the move across the Pacific in recent years. According to the Wall Street Journal, Chinese companies invested over $20 billion in the U.S. last year -from a practically nonexistent total investment back in 2006.
And yet, it would probably be mistaken to write off the world's second largest economy as a manufacturing powerhouse once and for all. As Fortune reported in early December, the latest data indicates that China's manufacturing sector is in its strongest position in some years, buttressing the country's economic growth along the way.