Nancy Marshall-Genzer is a senior reporter for Marketplace and works from the Washington D.C. bureau.

Marshall-Genzer began working for Marketplace in the spring of 2007, after filing freelance pieces for the program for years prior to that. Covering the daily news from the nation’s capital, Marshall-Genzer has reported many special features.

Marshall-Genzer has a long history in radio. Before joining the Marketplace portfolio, she worked at NPR, where her duties included producing, editing and reporting. Her previous experience also includes stints at WAMU 88.5 public radio in Washington, D.C., Monitor Radio and NBC radio and television, where she served as bureau chief for NBC TV in Tuzla, Bosnia.

In 1999, Marshall-Genzer won an American Medical Writers Association Award for her freelance contribution to the Marketplace series, “Wanted for Questioning: America’s Most Profitable Drug Companies.”

Marshall-Genzer holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Ohio University.

A native of Averill Park, N.Y., she currently lives in Silver Spring, Md., with her family, who recently welcomed twin sons. Describing herself as a nosy person, Marshall-Genzer appreciates that her job fulfills that desire to ask questions and learn something new every day.

Features By Nancy Marshall-Genzer

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H-1B visas: Not always a magic bullet for employers

Tech companies bemoan H-1B no-shows and interview imposters.
Posted In: H-1B visas, Jobs
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Can my DNA be patented? No, say justices

The Supreme Court’s ruling appears to be a serious blow to the business model of bringing to market products derived from naturally occurring DNA.
Posted In: dna, genomics, Supreme Court
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The meaning behind means testing for crop insurance

Tucked into the farm bill is language that would add means testing to the federally subsidized crop insurance program.
Posted In: farm bill, crop insurance, Agriculture
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IRS not alone in penchant for bashes

Expensive conferences are falling out of favor with federal agencies.
Posted In: IRS
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Troll no more? New executive orders seek to curb 'patent trolls'

The White House accuses some patent-holders, known as 'patent trolls,' of abusive lawsuits.
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Apple goes to court over alleged e-book price fixing

The Justice Department has accused Apple of colluding with publishers to fix the price of e-books.
Posted In: apple, ebooks, steve jobs
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Alfred E. Neuman might need to worry -- about Social Security

Social Security trust funds will dry up in 2033. So what does this mean for the chronically unworried, like say, Alfred E. Neuman of Mad Magazine fame? He will turn 59 in November -- seven years shy of retirement age.
Posted In: Social Security, mad magazine, Retirement
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Public comment, 21st century-style

Lawmakers revive a public comment campaign, with a modern-day twist.
Posted In: tax reform, Max Baucus, politics, Twitter
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Sequester cuts weigh on Head Start programs

Cuts to government-funded child development programs leave parents scrambling to find child care.
Posted In: sequester, Education, head start, childcare
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Uncle Sam might not want you anymore

It’s a good time to be a recruiter for the U.S. military. Applications are up, as youth unemployment continues to soar. And the Pentagon doesn’t need as many people as it did at the height of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Posted In: military, Army

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