President Donald Trump blasted Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the nation's central bank Thursday, blaming their actions for inflation and vowing to unleash American energy production to bring it down
The U.S. economy grew 2.3% in the fourth quarter as consumers again powered gains. Here's what the showing could mean for Fed plans for more rate cuts
GDP grew 2.3 per cent annually in the fourth quarter of 2024, down from 3.1 per cent in previous quarter. Read more at straitstimes.com.
To the untrained eye, Joe Biden leaves the presidency with what appears to be a sterling economic record: hiring proceeding at a solid clip, gross domestic product on the rise and consumers still spending at a strong pace. There's just one problem ...
President Joe Biden will leave the White House with a strong economy, historic gains in the job market, a foundation for future manufacturing growth, and having brought down decades-high inflation without triggering a recession.
The thing NCR columnist Michael Sean Winters most admired about President Joe Biden's Catholicism these past four years was not his embrace of Catholic social ethics. It was his observance of our cultic ethic.
President Joe Biden will leave the White House with ... an economy that continues to grow at a healthy clip. Real Gross Domestic Product, the broadest measure of economic output, expanded at ...
A top Republican budget hawk called growing federal interest costs "a ticking time bomb that must be defused."
Growth slowed but remained resilient at the end of 2024, leaving the US economy on solid footing heading into a new year — and a new presidential administration — that is full of uncertainty. US gross domestic product,
The new data were published Thursday by the Bureau of Economic Analysis in its report for gross domestic product for the fourth quarter.
Gross domestic product grew by 2.3 percent in the fourth quarter, capping a more robust year than expected. Policy uncertainty clouds the outlook.
Jobs are growing, unemployment is low, gross domestic product is strong, and consumer spending is healthy. Arkansas’ economy is booming, right? Yes and no. That’s according to University of