Steve LeVine, Axios

Steve LeVine

Axios

Contact Steve

Discover and connect with journalists and influencers around the world, save time on email research, monitor the news, and more.

Start free trial

Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Axios

Past articles by Steve:

The cost of the bacchanalia

No one knows how long the economy's resilience will hold up against incessant pressure. → Read More

2. Tech and the future of reading

Innovations in automation, mobility, society, cities, genetics, blockchain and more, by Steve LeVine. Weekday evenings → Read More

For struggling Americans, nowhere to go

There's no "promised land" of relatively high wages to make them want to move. → Read More

The future of bowling and belonging

A seam running through the last three years of political turbulence is a loss of a sense of belonging. → Read More

Axios Future - February 25, 2019

Innovations in automation, mobility, society, cities, genetics, blockchain and more, by Steve LeVine. Weekday evenings → Read More

1 big thing: Amazon faces an unfamiliar new era

Innovations in automation, mobility, society, cities, genetics, blockchain and more, by Steve LeVine. Weekday evenings → Read More

A string of international arrests signals a new age of hostage diplomacy

Poland's arrest of a Huawei executive on charges of spying for China escalates an already-fraught dimension of the turbulent new era of geopolitics. The big picture: A spate of arrests has broken out, with detentions of Americans and Canadians in China, Iran and Russia, and Chinese people jailed in Canada and now Poland. It appears to be unprecedented — political hostage-taking amid a modern… → Read More

School shootings have united Gen Z and young millennials

For coming-of-age youth, students killed in school shootings has been formative in their thinking. → Read More

The most positive thing that can be said about 2018 is that no big new wars broke out

Despite Trump's attempts to kneecap Iran and China, tensions grew fraught but avoided a breaking point. → Read More

Axios Future - November 16, 2018

Innovations in automation, mobility, society, cities, genetics, blockchain and more, by Steve LeVine. Weekday evenings → Read More

Amazon's new quest: Find 50k workers in a historically tight market

Very few tech grads or workers anywhere in the country appear to be begging for work. → Read More

Bank tellers have received the highest pay raises

These jobs have stayed ahead of inflation for three years → Read More

Experts expect Trump's trade war with China to go well into next year

And it's not clear who — if anyone — will win. → Read More

"White hat" hackers can make easy cash helping companies find vulnerabilities

Hackers can make big bucks, though most don't. → Read More

Inside Russia's invasion of the U.S. electric grid

It's a new step in the era of cyber deterrence. → Read More

2. A dip in data science wages

Innovations in automation, mobility, society, cities, genetics, blockchain and more, by Steve LeVine. Weekday evenings → Read More

America's wage crisis no longer looks temporary

Stuck wages for most U.S. workers look like more than a blip in the booming economy, and some mainstream economists say the government may have to step in. What's going on: Wages fell over the last year for ordinary, non-management workers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, further evidence that companies are managing to avoid paying amid one of the tightest labor markets in decades. → Read More

How Chinese tech giants like Alibaba are bringing AI to neighborhood corner stores

The future of retail is playing out in China's mom-and-pop shops. → Read More

In China, a picture of how warehouse jobs can vanish

In e-commerce, delivering faster means automating. → Read More

Why Xi and Putin think "the West is in free fall"

"Long term, China is the emerging superpower; Putin's a master tactician but doesn't have a plan." → Read More