A Week's Worth

March 12, 2007

The downturn of stocks earlier this month didn't last long, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rebounding 1.3 percent in last week's trading.

Those promotions dangled by commercial tax-preparers that offer loans in anticipation of a refund aren't finding many takers, according to credit and information management specialist TransUnion Interactive. Only 13 percent of respondents to its third annual survey on refund-use plans said they expect to take advantage of such opportunities. Forty-one percent said any money coming back from federal or state revenue services will go toward paying down a mortgage.

As excited as you may be to start a new job, you won't be unusual if – in less than a year – you've already left it, the Novations consulting group says. It polled human-resource directors at 2,000 employers and found that one-third reported a dropout rate of 10 percent to 25 percent "within the first year." The No. 1 reason: unrealistic expectations, either of the work or of the employer.

Because of their busy schedules, half of all Americans have become buyers of ready-to-eat meals for home consumption at least once a week, results of a new survey show. That finding, in a poll by the Roper Starch organization, illustrates why the "home meal replacement segment" accounts for 80 percent of the growth in the food industry, says McKinsey & Co., a consulting group.