Critics of Indonesian President Joko Widodo blame sniping ministers and bureaucrats for the economy's decline.
The $1.37 billion deal, involving 14 regional airports, comes ahead of a German vote Wednesday on a third bailout package for Greece.
The Trigana Air Service turboprop plane crashed in a mountainous region in eastern Indonesia Sunday, killing all 54 people on board.
The United Auto Workers union lashed out at a report that General Motors "would almost certainly" import a Chinese-made Buick to the U.S.
The controversial treatment could soon be prescribed to millions of American women.
An EPA proposal for cutting emissions from U.S. oil and gas operations won't affect existing natural gas gathering facilities, a major methane polluter.
In both the U.S. and Britain, party leadership contests have been upended by the popularity of marginal candidates.
The sudden change in the currency's value has negative consequences for U.S. companies with significant operations in the Asian country.
Nissan recently exported its 5 millionth vehicle from Mexico, signaling the country's growth as an auto manufacturing hub.
The Food and Drug Administration is poised to approve the first treatment for hypoactive sexual desire disorder.
Developers of a bitcoin update have launched a divisive power play in a bid to keep the digital currency alive. But it could tear the community apart.
Sharp losses in China's benchmark index raise concerns about Beijing's efforts to stabilize financial markets.
This announcement comes a week after NBCUniversal made a similar investment in Vox Media.
The Environmental Protection Agency plan would require the oil and gas sector to decrease such output by 45 percent over the next decade.
The western U.S. is littered with hundreds of thousands of abandoned hard-rock mines, and state and federal officials are struggling with the cleanup.
The world’s largest retailer has come under pressure from wage increases in the U.S. and a strong dollar overseas.
The Shanghai Composite Index fell nearly 6.2 percent to close at 3748.16, while the smaller Shenzhen Composite Index fell 6.6 percent.
Nearly 4,000 square miles of the Indian Ocean off Réunion Island was scoured but "nothing suspected of having any connection to a plane" was found.
Brazil's Petrobras expects to face the largest penalties ever levied by U.S. authorities in a corporate corruption investigation.
Indonesia's government has struggled to hire and train staff quickly enough to oversee its fast-growing aviation market, which the International Air Transport Association expects to triple in size by 2034.
The Obama administration granted Royal Dutch Shell final clearance on Monday to resume drilling for oil and gas in the environmentally fragile Arctic Ocean for the first time since 2012, a move green groups vowed to fight.
Investors have been lured back to Tesla Motors stock on bullish sentiment over "shared mobility."
Global automakers are still assessing the damage. Toyota says production lines are down. Nearly 5,000 destroyed cars have been counted so far.
Fewer Americans belong to labor unions, but an increasing number approve of them.
Stocks traded flat Monday after U.S. home-building data came in as expected, but New York manufacturing showed a steep drop.
CEO Jeff Bezos released an internal memo to employees denying the New York Times' depiction of Amazon as a "soulless, dystopian workplace."
A new drug that promises to boost women's libido has inflamed controversy over whether it helps or hurts women. IBTimes interviewed seven women about what it's like to live with a low sex drive — and got their thoughts on a little pink pill called Addyi.
IndiGo is the largest domestic airline in India in terms of market share, which some estimates expect to have crossed 40 percent for this fiscal year.
A Trigana Air Service turboprop plane was flying from Jayapura to the city of Oksibil when it went down Sunday.
IMF's participation in the new 86 billion-euro bailout is uncertain because the fund demands debt relief to ease the burden on Greece.