Advertisement.

Paul Dykewicz

share

Insured property damage caused by the recent rioting in Baltimore has hit $23.9 million and is destined to rise, especially with business interruption claims still unknown, according to the latest figures from the Insurance Information Institute.

share

Hear Eagle Daily Investor Editor Paul Dykewicz discuss the latest about the weak U.S. economy, the financial fallout in Baltimore since the April 27 riot and lessons for city leaders elsewhere about how to avoid civil unrest in their own communities.

share

Listen to Paul Dykewicz’s recent interviews on a variety of political and economic topics.

share

The kind of leadership that could have guided Baltimore’s protestors away from criminal behavior and ruining hundreds of small businesses during rioting is not what manifested itself when the city’s mayor publicly announced she gave those who want to “destroy” room to do so.

DJ on the radio
share

View Paul Dykewicz’s recent interviews on Sunday Nights With Michael Schaus on a variety of political and economic topics.

[Gross Domestic Expenditures chart]
share

The U.S. economy is slowing but thus far is avoiding a recession, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.