Sweetgreen appears well-positioned to ride new trends in the economy.
Why it matters: Restaurants have been among the slowest businesses to recover from the pandemic — battling financial hardship from closures and broken supply chains, then worker shortages, inflation and the fallout of remote work.
OpenAI no longer has a separate "superalignment" team tasked with ensuring that artificial general intelligence (AGI) doesn't turn on humankind.
Why it matters: The non-profit firm — founded to protect the world from the gravest threats AI could pose — is looking more and more like an impatient Silicon Valley startup cranking out new products at warp speed.
Manufacturing workers at Mercedes-Benz in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, voted against joining the UAW in a reminder of how difficult it is to form unions in the South.
Why it matters: The UAW had been hoping to make the plant the second in as many months to join the union after years of failed attempts to organize foreign-owned factories.
France is calling on Paris businesses to polish up their hospitality skills ahead of the influx of visitors flocking to this summer's Olympic Games.
Why it matters: The country is determined to shake its clichéd reputation for being rude to embrace the more than 1 million visitors who will pump as much as $12 billion into the economy during the games.
Charitable funds are paying financial advisers millions of dollars in advisory fees — and the IRS wants to crack down on those agreements.
Why it matters: One of the big secrets in the world of philanthropy is how much money flows back to donors' financial advisers after being given away to charity.
Lower-income households increased their spending by 2% in April, while high earners saw a slower spending increase, according to new credit and debit card data from Bank of America Institute.
Why it matters: Consumer spending drives the U.S. economy, and BofA's data provides a counterpoint to warning signs about a spending slowdown at the low end of the income scale.