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The Washington Post Saturday, June 30, 2012
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Business
For businesses, plenty of questions remain about the health-care law

For all the clarity that the Supreme Court's ruling on health care provided Thursday, it could take years for companies to sort out how the law will affect them — and what it means for the future of America's $2.7 trillion health-care industry.

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(Sarah Kliff, Jia Lynn Yang)

Supreme Court ruling could boost the cost of health-care reform, ex-CBO chief argues

Did the Supreme Court just make the Affordable Care Act much less affordable?

The calculations are complex, and the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has said it will need some time to review the situation. But an early back-of-the-envelope analysis by a former CBO director suggests that Thursday's ruling could sharply raise the cost of President Obama's signature legislative achievement.

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(Lori Montgomery)

Student loan deal passed by Congress

The U.S. Congress on Friday approved a measure freezing federally subsidized student loan rates for a year, averting a doubling of rates scheduled to occur Sunday and offering President Obama the opportunity to claim victory after a high-profile pressure campaign to persuade Congress to act.

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(Rosalind S. Helderman)

Sony buys EMI publishing for $2.2 billion

A group of investors led by Sony closed a $2.2 billion purchase of EMI Music Publishing on Friday, just hours after the Federal Trade Commission announced that it was no longer investigating the proposed deal.

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(Dina ElBoghdady)

U.S. urges China to respect Internet freedom after Bloomberg Web site is censored

American officials urged China on Friday not to censor its Internet after the government blocked access to the Bloomberg News Web site. The Chinese government had denied Web access to the financial news agency after an investigative article on massive wealth amassed by relatives of Xi Jinping, the man expected to become China's president.

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(William Wan, Keith Richburg)

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