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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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
0

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
1

The pros and cons of a possible QE3

Later today, the Federal Reserve wraps up a two day policy-setting meeting. The big question is whether they'll launch another round of "quantitative Easing" -- buying up bonds to inject some money and a bit more pep into the U.S. economy.
Posted In: quantitative easing, Federal Reserve
1

Amid protests over film, U.S. ambassador to Libya killed

The U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other diplomats have been killed in protests in Benghazi. Religious extremists stormed the U.S. consulate there. A controversial anti-Islamic video, posted on YouTube, was the catalyst for the attack. That has put YouTube and it's owner Google in an uncomfortable position.
Posted In: Ambassador, Libya, unrest
2

Training for new manufacturing skill requirements

North Carolina community colleges work with local companies on which job skills to teach students.
Posted In: North Carolina, manufacturing
0

Chicago teachers' strike begins second day

Questions about how to care for children while their teachers are on strike are among the issues plaguing leaders and residents in Chicago.
Posted In: Chicago, strike, teachers
1

As Americans pay off credit cards, student loan debt grows

Credit card delinquency rates are near record lows, but student loan debt is filling the void and that could affect the job market
Posted In: credit card debt, student loan
1

U.S. Treasury to sell $18 billion in AIG stock

Stock sale would reduce the U.S. government's stake in the once-troubled insurance firm to less than half for the first time since it bailed out AIG in 2008.
Posted In: AIG, U.S. Treasury

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