Mitchell Hartman is the senior reporter for Marketplace’s Entrepreneurship Desk and also covers employment.

A veteran Marketplace reporter, he was hired in 1994 as an assistant producer on the Marketplace Morning Report, hosted that program in 1996 and 1997, and then served as commentary editor and features editor for all Marketplace productions.

Hartman left Marketplace in 2001 to move to Portland, Ore., where he served as editor of a statewide business magazine, Oregon Business, and was subsequently editor of Reed College’s alumni magazine. In 2008, Hartman returned to Marketplace to serve in his current position, filing reports from his bureau’s base at Oregon Public Broadcasting in his adopted hometown of Portland.

Since 2008, Hartman has produced a number of broadcast series, including, "Different States of Unemployment" (spring 2009) and "Help Not Wanted" (summer 2010).

He also traveled to Egypt to cover the Arab Spring. Hartman enjoys his work as a radio reporter because it provides him the opportunity to “ask impertinent questions and exercise my curiosity to the max.”

Before his career with American Public Media, Hartman worked in human rights and refugee advocacy for the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights (now Human Rights First). He has also worked at the Philadelphia Inquirer, Cairo Today magazine, Middletown Press, New Haven Register and for Pacifica Radio, Monitor Radio, the BBC and the CBC.

Hartman is a native of Teaneck, N.J., and holds a Bachelor of Arts in Religion from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania and a master’s degree in Journalism from Columbia University in New York.

Features By Mitchell Hartman

Pages

2

Pick-your-policy health care

Instead of offering policies to choose from, some big employers will be offering workers a lump sum and letting them shop for their own health care.
Posted In: health insurance
1

Savers among hardest hit by low interest rates

People who save may bear a disproportionate share of the burden in our insatiable appetite for low interest rates.
Posted In: QE3, interest rates
1

Topshop: From off-the-rack to off the virtual runway

Topshop, the London retailer, is offering something new at this year's spring 2013 fashion show. Consumers can buy items the models are wearing on the Topshop web site during the live-streamed show.
Posted In: fashion, Topshop, Fashion Week, streaming
1

iPhone boom is short-term bust for wireless carriers

AT&T, Verizon and Sprint offer huge subsidies on new smartphones that hit bottom line.
Posted In: iphone 5, AT&T, Verizon, Sprint
0

Burberry profit warning signals luxury sales slide

Weeks of flat store sales at the high-end British clothier could be a sign that China's economic slowdown and Europe's debt crisis are ending a nearly three-year boom in demand for luxury goods.
Posted In: luxury, Retail, Burberry
0

The rise of the CEO pitchman

From Frank Perdue and his chickens to Lee Iacocca and his cars, product pitches by CEOs are not uncommon. But since Steve Jobs' performances at Apple, they've become part of the job description for tech CEO.
Posted In: ceo, steve jobs
3

U.S. adds 96,000 jobs in August, unemployment drops to 8.1%

The August jobs numbers come below expectations, though the unemployment rate drops to 8.1 percent.
Posted In: Jobs, Unemployment
1

Waiting for the big jobs report

August job creation may have been good. But it's not clear any improvement can change voters' minds now.
Posted In: Jobs
0

Fashion Week and a ruling on red shoes

French designer Christian Louboutin wins trademark protection on red-soled women's shoes.
Posted In: Fashion Week, Christian Louboutin
0

FedEx earnings down, global economy to blame

FedEx has downgraded -- again -- its quarterly earnings estimate for the period ending in August.
Posted In: fedex

Pages