Allan Sloan Explained

Allan Sloan
Birth Place:Brooklyn, New York
Awards:Seven-time winner of the Gerald Loeb Award
Occupation:Columnist
Education:B.A., Brooklyn College and M.S., Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism

Allan Sloan (born 1944[1]) is an American journalist, formerly a senior editor at large at Fortune magazine.[2] He subsequently became a business columnist on contract for The Washington Post,[3] and since the start of 2023 has been self-employed.

Sloan was born in Brooklyn, New York and is a 1966 graduate of Brooklyn College with a B.A.; he received his M.S. as a 1967 graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He attended the Jewish Theological Seminary for two years while he was an undergraduate at Brooklyn College.[4]

Career

Sloan has spoken about the economy on television shows such as Charlie Rose, The Colbert Report and regularly on American Public Media's radio program Marketplace and heard on NPR.

His first experience in journalism was as a freshman at Brooklyn College. He had been complaining about the student newspaper when his English professor, who was the paper's faculty advisor, told him that if he thought he could do a better job, then he should go to work for the paper.

Sloan got his first writing job in 1968, with the Charlotte Observer; he was originally hired as a sports writer, but later was assigned to writing about real estate. In December 1969, he was assigned to write about business and the economy.

Sloan continued working as a journalist, first as a business reporter for the Detroit Free Press, (1972-1978) and later as a staff writer for Money magazine (1982-1984). He worked as an associate editor for Forbes magazine (1979-1981) and as a senior editor (1984-1988). He was a self-syndicated columnist for Newsday before leaving for Newsweek in 1995 to become its Wall Street editor.[5]

In 2005, during the controversy surrounding Halliburton and Dick Cheney, Sloan wrote in his article, "Halliburton Pays Dearly but Finally Escapes Cheney's Asbestos Mess," that "As Cheney's Dresser misadventure shows, today's triumphant deal champ can be tomorrow's chump."[6] Ten months later, in a Mother Jones article, "Bush's Bad Business Empire," Sloan was quoted as saying "Cheney was a 'CEO who messed up big-time.'"[7]

In 2007, Sloan left Newsweek and began working as a Senior Editor at Large for Fortune magazine. In 2008, Sloan won the Gerald Loeb Award for the seventh time; the prize was given for his story "House of Junk," which showed how subprime mortgages "went bad". In a 2009 story, "Unheeded Warnings," Chris Roush spoke to the fact that journalists had been "waving the red flag" for several years in the lead up to the financial crisis of 2007–2008. Roush quoted Sloan as saying, "The fact that housing was a bubble was printed a million times."[8]

In July 2014, "Positively Un-American" was published as a Fortune cover story, reporting on corporations dodging billions in taxes by doing something called a corporate inversion: moving their headquarters out of the U.S. and leaving American taxpayers to cover the cost of the taxes that they were dodging. The in-depth article described how the U.S. could be expected to lose approximately $19.5 billion in tax revenue between 2015 and 2024 if corporate tax reform wasn't implemented.

In the article, he included this self-described "rant":

He went on, in the article, to describe how these corporate "inverters" hesitate when it's time to "ante up" and pay their fair share of taxes.

On July 22, 2014, Sloan spoke before the United States Senate Committee on Finance, and suggested in closing, that it would be "absolutely tragic" if Congress allowed politics to stop reforms that were needed and allow the subject to dissolve into soundbites and rhetoric.[9] [10]

Sloan left Fortune in 2014, with his last article published in December 2014. After leaving Fortune, he wrote a business column on contract with the Washington Post, and since the beginning of 2023 he has been self-employed, writing for outlets that include Barron's, Yahoo Finance and Fast Company.

Awards and recognition

Sloan has received many awards over the span of his more than 50-year career. He was picked as the Business Journalist of the Decade, by Talking Biz News for the first decade of the 21st century.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2013-03-31. By Allan Sloan. 2020-09-12. AHBJ. en-US.
  2. Web site: Biz journalism legend Sloan has left Fortune. Roush. Chris. 20 February 2015. Talking Biz News. 26 June 2015.
  3. News: Sloan. Allan. The Washington Post. .
  4. https://www.pbs.org/now/politics/sloan.html "Allan Sloan Biography"
  5. Web site: Allan Sloan. 2020-09-13. Business Insider.
  6. Web site: Halliburton Pays Dearly but Finally Escapes Cheney's Asbestos Mess (washingtonpost.com). 2020-09-13. www.washingtonpost.com.
  7. Web site: Engler. Mark. Bush's Bad Business Empire. 2020-09-13. Mother Jones. en-US.
  8. Web site: American Journalism Review - Archives. 2020-09-13. ajrarchive.org.
  9. Web site: Positively un-American tax dodges. 2020-09-13. Fortune. en.
  10. Web site: The U.S. Tax Code: Love It, Leave It or Reform It! The United States Senate Committee on Finance. 2020-09-13. www.finance.senate.gov. en.
  11. Web site: Historical Winners List. UCLA Anderson School of Management. January 31, 2019.
  12. Web site: Royster wins Loeb Award for financial journalism . September 25, 1975 . . 64 . February 6, 2019.
  13. Book: Starkman, Dean . The Wathdog That Didn't Bark: The Financial Crisis and the Disappearance of Investigative Journalism . . 2014 . 978-0-231-53628-8 . New York . 89.
  14. News: Loeb Winners Announced . Thomson . Susan . The Business Journalist . February 2, 2019 . . 1 . June 1991 . 30 . 3 .
  15. Web site: 2013-04-01. John Hancock Awards for Excellence in Business Writing. 2020-09-12. AHBJ. en-US.
  16. Web site: Winners and Finalists in Loeb Competition Announced . May 19, 1998 . The Write News . February 3, 2019.
  17. Web site: History of Business Journalism. 2020-09-12. www.bizjournalismhistory.org.
  18. Web site: Financial Journalists Chosen For 2001 Gerald Loeb Honors . June 1, 2001 . . February 4, 2019.
  19. Web site: 2001 News: SABEW 2001 Distinguished Achievement Award Recipient Announced « SABEW. 2020-09-12. sabew.org. 30 April 2001 .
  20. Web site: 2014 Best in Business Honorees « SABEW. 2020-09-12. sabew.org.