by Matt Richtel and Brad Stone, Staff Writers, New York Times
Housing prices in Silicon Valley remain defiantly high. New BMWs and Saabs cruise Highway 101. But for the first time there are signs that the current economic downturn is taking its toll on the country’s cradle of technology and innovation. Job growth has slowed, start-up companies are hiring and spending more cautiously, and early-stage investors who nurture the start-ups with money and expertise are growing more frugal.
by Pui-Wing Tam, Staff Writer, The Wall Street Journal
Silicon Valley continued its economic revival last year by adding nearly 30,000 jobs and raising its median income levels, but the nation’s technology capital is experiencing some instability as the national economy struggles.
The findings come in a closely watched annual report from Joint Venture Silicon Valley and the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, two nonprofit groups representing businesses, government agencies and philanthropies in the San Francisco and San Jose, Calif., area.
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