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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Bowl game exposure can come with a cost

Schools see costs of participating in a bowl game as a down payment on invaluable exposure.
Posted In: college sports, college football
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Number of 'disconnected youth' on the rise

Millions of young people are out of school and have no jobs.
Posted In: youth, high school, Jobs
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Defense education, training programs at stake if no fiscal deal reached

If a deal isn't reached on the fiscal cliff, the Defense Department faces half-a-trillion dollars worth of cuts across the board. So why can't lawmakers come to an agreement?
Posted In: fiscal cliff, defense
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SEC: Watchdog or lapdog?

With Mary Schapiro stepping down as chairwoman, how effective is the SEC in policing securities markets?
Posted In: Securities and Exchange Commission, Mary Schapiro
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Mary Schapiro: The woman who 'saved the SEC'

Mary Schapiro, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, announced that she will leave her position. Schapiro took her post at the SEC just after the financial crisis and is credited with helping to craft reforms to prevent future economic disasters.
Posted In: Securities and Exchange Commission, Mary Schapiro, financial reform
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Worries grow over cuts to unemployment aid

During the recession, Congress lengthened unemployment aid to a maximum of 99 weeks. If not renewed, the current extension will expire at the end of the year.
Posted In: Unemployment, fiscal cliff, unemployment benefits
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Election donors already looking ahead to next campaigns

It has been two weeks since the election, and the big number we're going to focus on is: $6 billion. That's how much money was spent on the 2012 campaign... And a lot of that money came from big donors.
Posted In: super PACs, campaign spending
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The effects of a short-term 'cliff'

Even a brief slide off the 'fiscal cliff' is likely to reverberate through the economy.
Posted In: fiscal cliff
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Banks absent from Obama business gathering

American Express is the only financial services firm to attend the president's CEO meeting on the fiscal cliff.
Posted In: fiscal cliff, american express
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Google search in North Carolina: Jobs

Struggling N.C. county lures Google facility with incentives. Were they worth it?
Posted In: Google, North Carolina, Jobs

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