David Gura is a reporter for Marketplace, based in the Washington, D.C. bureau. He regularly reports on Congress and the White House, economic and fiscal policy and the implementation of financial reform. Gura joined Marketplace in 2010, and enjoys helping listeners make sense of some of the biggest economic stories today. He likes the process of diving headfirst into a story and putting it together under a tight deadline, and tries to heed a piece of advice from George Packer, staff writer for The New Yorker: “Cover Washington as if it’s a foreign capital.” Prior to joining Marketplace, Gura worked at NPR as an editor and a producer, and as a reporter for “The Two-Way,” NPR’s news blog. Gura got his start in public radio in his hometown of Chapel Hill, N.C., as an intern for “The State of Things” at North Carolina Public Radio – WUNC.   Gura has received fellowships from Stanford University and the National Constitution Center. He has also participated in conferences organized by the French-American Foundation and Washington University in St. Louis.   Gura attended Cornell University, where he received his bachelor’s degree in history and American studies, with a concentration in Latin-American studies. He attended the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, from which he received a master’s degree.  

Features By David Gura

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Meningitis outbreak shines light on 'compounding pharmacies'

Pharmacies linked to meningitis outbreak not regulated by FDA.
Posted In: meningitis, Health, pharmaceuticals, FDA
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Medicare: Is it really the 'third rail' of politics?

Some efforts to change the government health care program for seniors has triggered fireworks; others, not so much.
Posted In: Medicare
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Who would a $17K cap on tax deductions affect?

Mitt Romney says he wants to lower everyone’s tax rate by 20 percent, and one way of doing that is to restrict deductions of more than $17,000. Experts say Mitt Romney 's deduction cap would mostly impact the wealthy.
Posted In: Mitt Romney, 2012 elections, Taxes
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Libyan oil production almost back to normal

Civi war combatants mindful of the importance of oil on the economy, left infrastructure largely undamaged.
Posted In: Oil, energy, Civil War
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Economic confidence varies from street to C-suite

While consumer confidence may be higher, business executives are less bullish
Posted In: consumer confidence, ceo, executives
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Health care spending grows 4% after downward trend

Study finds growth in healthcare spending has reversed its post-recession slump.
Posted In: health care, healthcare spending
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The safest jobs in the U.S.

Today the U.S. government gives us a list of the most-dangerous jobs. What are the safest?
Posted In: Jobs
7

Income tax or not, we can never fully avoid the tax bite

From levies on utilities to purchases, the tax man is with us every step of our day.
Posted In: Taxes
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U.S. companies roll with turmoil in Egypt

Some businesses see little impact of current unrest on long-term business strategy in Egypt.
Posted In: Egypt
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Early reactions to the Fed's QE3 announcement

Yesterday, Ben Bernanke announced the Federal Reserve is going to do another round of what’s called “quantitative easing.” The Fed will buy $40 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities every month until Bernanke and his colleagues are satisfied the job market -- and the economy -- have improved.
Posted In: Federal Reserve, QE3

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