GDP

GDP Articles

The economy may get another 4% growth rate in GDP in the third quarter of 2018. Or will it?
Right now the United States is a $20 trillion economy with about a 4% unemployment rate and with more job openings than able bodies to fill those jobs. Still, many deep scars are very evident as...
Wednesday's economic reporting brought the first revision to second-quarter gross domestic product.
The current bull market is 3,453 days old, which is a record. It will end, but when? And how bad will the sell-off be?
A wave of 100 degrees plus weather across much of the United States is not over. And the effects on the economy are likely to worsen each day.
If the CBO is correct, the U.S. economy will go two decades without a recession, which is near twice any past the period.
The Turkish economic disaster caught many of the world's global financial experts by surprise, so it is no wonder that the catastrophe has roiled the markets so badly.
It turns out that all the hype about higher growth actually can come true. GDP for the second quarter saw its largest gain in about four years.
With second-quarter GDP reading coming out this Friday, there have been several economic reports that already point to July's manufacturing activity.
North Korea's GDP dropped the most last year that it has since 1997. This trouble poses a challenge to dictator Kim Jong-un, who oversees a nation in which millions of people live in poverty.
The IMF's World Economic Outlook Update finds the global and U.S. economies in good shape but offered some new warnings.
The chances for wage increases in the economy, particularly at the low end of the scale, are depressing. And GDP faces a real threat as discretionary spending probably falters.
It appears that consumer spending, which makes up the majority of U.S. GDP, was weaker than had been expected in the first quarter.
Monsanto name to be eliminated, a SpaceX mission to the moon is delayed, trade wars could curtail global economic growth, and other important headlines.
The second estimate of first-quarter U.S. GDP growth was revised downward by 0.1 percentage points to 2.2% quarter over quarter.