ISSUE DATE: March 18, 2002
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U.S. EDITION
Full Table of Contents
Cover Story
Up Front
Readers Report
Corrections & Clarifications
Books
Technology & You
Economic Viewpoint
Economic Trends
Industry Insider
Business Outlook

News: Analysis & Commentary
In Business This Week
Washington Outlook
International Business
International Outlook
Government
Information Technology
Social Issues
The Corporation
People

Sports Business
Finance
Science & Technology
Developments to Watch
BusinessWeek Investor
BusinessWeek Lifestyle
The Barker Portfolio
Inside Wall Street
Figures of the Week
Editorials


E.BIZ SUPPLEMENT March 18 Table of Contents

INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS
International -- Readers Report
International -- Asian Business
International -- European Business
International -- Finance
International -- Int'l Figures of the Week



COVER STORY

The Surprise Economy
First-half growth could be three or four times recent expectations
COVER IMAGE:  The Surprise Economy
CHART:  A Shorter, Milder Downturn
CHART:  Faster Action, More Resilience
COMMENTARY:  Why the Bears Aren't Backing Down
CHART:  A History of Double Dips
"We May Have Come Too Far, Too Fast"
CHART:  On the Mend
Would a Pinch of Inflation Help?
CHART:  Profit Starved


BUSINESSWEEK E.BIZ

BusinessWeek e.biz
In our latest report on electronic business: The Web at your service, Act II. Plus: Prada gets personal; Can Mark Goldston rescue ISP United Online? And much more


UP FRONT

Talk Show

A Texas-Size Case of Discrimination?

Funds Say: "Come On In, the Water's Fine"

Starbucks' Card Smarts

Digital States

Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch...

Psst! Help Wanted in the Stacks

Sucker Prices--but Who's the Sucker?


READERS REPORT

The Plight of the Betrayed Investor

Character in the Boardroom

The True Depth of the Accounting Crisis


CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS

"New drugs: Why so many delays?" (Science & Technology, Mar. 11, 2002)


BOOKS

A Hotbed of Holy War?


TECHNOLOGY & YOU

Can Anyone Put a Lid on Porno Spam?


ECONOMIC VIEWPOINT

Enron Was Mostly Right About One Thing: Deregulation


ECONOMIC TRENDS

Game Theory's Hidden Holes

Keeping a Lid on Unemployment

Deeper Debt for Uncle Sam


INDUSTRY INSIDER

Q&A: Putting "The Worst of Times" behind Him


BUSINESS OUTLOOK

U.S.: The Party Spreads to the Factory Floor

Germany: A Brief Recession--If Exports Pick Up


NEWS: ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY

Commentary: Broadband Policy: Did Somebody Say Oligopoly?

Bill Gates Isn't in the Clear Yet

You Call This Tax Simplification?

Commentary: Bush's Steely Pragmatism

Commentary: ABC Needs More Than Letterman


IN BUSINESS THIS WEEK

Heidi Miller: Back from the Bubble

Leaving Amazon on a High Note

ImClone's New Pact with Bristol

Tough Times, CEO Style

Firing Arthur Andersen

The Airwaves Fight Just Got Longer

Et Cetera...

Clubbed Club


WASHINGTON OUTLOOK

In California, a Defeat for White House Control Freaks

No Escape from Enron


INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS

Crime and Politics
Suddenly, they are the hottest of issues in Europe, and some politicians are pointing fingers at immigrants

Rebel in a Bow Tie
Swiss financier Martin Ebner is boosting his stakes in companies all over Europe. And he's not a passive investor

Japan's Deflation Disaster
A Rally of Smoke and Mirrors?


INTERNATIONAL OUTLOOK

Is Washington Fighting Terrorism on Too Many Fronts?

Afghanistan's Bumper Crop


GOVERNMENT

How Bush Would Hold CEOs' Feet to the Fire


INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Commentary: The Best Way to Make Software Secure: Liability

Compaq and HP: What's an Investor to Do?


SOCIAL ISSUES

A Better Way to Make a Difference?


THE CORPORATION

Can Pfizer Stay This Robust?


PEOPLE

Amgen: Up from Biotech
RESUME:  Kevin Sharer


SPORTS BUSINESS

Commentary: Mr. Tyson Goes to Washington?


FINANCE

Wall Street Partnerships: Too Close for Comfort
Did CalPERS Bend Its Own Standards?

Law & Order: Enron Victims Unit

Guess Who's Going After Wall Street

Commentary: A Few Telecom Deals Don't Add Up to a Revival


SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Is It Really Fusion This Time?


DEVELOPMENTS TO WATCH

Nano Devices That Are on Sale Now

Rule, Britannia--in Stem Cell Research

Transforming Sunflowers into Tires

Tiny Radio ID Tags for Just Pennies


BUSINESSWEEK INVESTOR

Where This Bear Is Putting His Honey
RESUME:  Jeremy Grantham
ONLINE EXTRA:  Q&A with GMO's Jeremy Grantham

GDP: The Mother of All Numbers

Blowing Whistles--and Being Ignored


BUSINESSWEEK LIFESTYLE

When the Nightmares Won't Go Away


THE BARKER PORTFOLIO

A Nearsighted Deal from Nestlé


INSIDE WALL STREET

Lafarge Pours It on

All Set to Dial Ulticom's Number?

IntraBiotics: Good Word of Mouth


FIGURES OF THE WEEK

Figures of the Week (.pdf)


EDITORIALS

Keeping Exuberance in Check

Things We Don't Like


INTERNATIONAL -- READERS REPORT

Did Barro Mostly Get It Wrong?

Leading the Charge for Open Books at Gazprom

Rural Elections Could Ease Unrest in China

Japan Needs to Come Together to Defeat Deflation

Koizumi's Ratings May Be Down, but He's Not Out

In Praise of the One-Button Mouse

Let's Hear It for the Little Airlines


INTERNATIONAL -- ASIAN BUSINESS

South Korea: High-Speed Profits Ahead

For Jobs, Hong Kong Execs Head North

India: Losing Faith in a Standout State


INTERNATIONAL -- EUROPEAN BUSINESS

Commentary: The EU: Too Tough on Prospective Members?
Some Eastern bloc countries are complaining about the enlargement process' stingy financing

Now, a One-Currency Newspaper--Free
European media giant Metro International's freebies are facing tough resistance from other dailies

Suddenly, It's Big Business vs. Putin
Tycoons are turning up the heat on the President to delay Russia's WTO entry


INTERNATIONAL -- FINANCE

As Tech Warms Up, Taiwan Finance Gets Hot

Does the U.S. Give Enough?
America sees the need to boost contributions for fighting world poverty -- but only on its own terms


INTERNATIONAL -- INT'L FIGURES OF THE WEEK

International Figures of the Week (.pdf)


ARTICLES PREVIOUSLY PUBLISHED IN INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS

March 11, 2001
The Wait for Free Trade with China Just Got a Little Longer
A New Look for a Mercedes Classic

BW MagazineOnline Highlights from this issue
BW MagazineMagazine Forums


BW Magazine

Cover Illustration by Lou Beach

For articles in the March 18, 2002 domestic edition previously published in international editions

RECENT ISSUES
Can Sony Regain the Magic?
Wall Street's Lone Ranger

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Video Views

The End Is Here?
Is the recession over -- and was it a recession to begin with? Two BusinessWeek editors debate the questions


Bush Blunders
Protecting steel, boosting the Bell monopolies, and starving the SEC are contrary to his principles, says BW's Bruce Nussbaum


Emerging Markets
Before investing, look for a country that has a strong legal system and meets other social and political criteria, says BW's Bob Dowling


Rate Reversal?
A string of strong indicators isn't likely to spur Greenspan to raise rates right away, says BW's Gene Marcial


Manufacturing Is Back
Now that this hard-hit sector is finally turning around, the recession truly looks to be on the way out, says BW's Kathleen Madigan

  SPECIAL REPORTS
Best Global Brands
These 100 brands are among the world's most recognized—and most valuable

Best Places to Launch a Career
We canvassed career-services directors, employers, and students to rank the best companies for recent graduates

BusinessWeek 50
Our picks of the top-performing companies from the S&P 500. Plus, regional rankings for Asia and Europe:
Asia's BusinessWeek 50
Europe's BusinessWeek 50

Customer Service Champs
Companies that excel at pleasing customers, based on J.D. Power & Associates customer satisfaction data and our own reader survey

Hot Growth 100
From young, upstart companies to those that have been around for centuries: Plus, regional rankings of top-performing small businesses in Asia and Europe:
Asia's Hot Growth 100
Europe's Hot Growth 100

Info Tech 100
Emerging-market cellular players, wireless phone and gear makers, and Web giants are this year's stars

World's Most Innovative Companies
Nurturing, creative cultures allow these companies to wow customers with innovative products and services

More Special Reports

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