GDP

GDP Articles

The economic reports on Monday were far less important compared to the jobs and wages data released on Friday, but we are getting a sense of January's U.S. services and non-manufacturing economy.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics has released its reading on labor productivity and unit labor costs for the fourth quarter.
Eurozone GDP rose more than 2% in the fourth quarter, meaning that the growth of the once deeply recession-plagued economy has caught up to the U.S. expansion rate.
JPMorgan elevates two potential successors to James Dimon, Walmart asks suppliers to deliver on time or face fines, job growth worldwide has not helped improve wages, and other important headlines.
The International Monetary Fund has bumped up its estimate for global GDP growth in 2018 and 2019. The forecast did come with several warnings.
China's GDP may well catch that of the United States at its current rate of growth. It will have to clear some high hurdles to get there.
Retailers count on the weeks just after Christmas for a final push by customers to pick through inventory that was not sold over the holidays.
Eurozone GDP rose in the third quarter, Disney CEO Robert Iger will probably renew his contract, GM will upgrade its pickups, and more important headlines.
The NABE Outlook is among the most carefully watched forecasts for economic growth. In its December survey, those questioned say a recession next year is highly unlikely.
CVS Healthcare will buy Aetna, Broadcom wants to buy rival Qualcomm, economists believe growth of the U.S. economy will be stronger than they had expected, and more important headlines.
On a Friday, when the markets had been glued to headlines around tax legislation, and then again Flynn-Russia-Trump news, the Federal Reserve's view on U.S. GDP for the fourth quarter was ratcheted...
The Bureau of Economic Analysis issued its first revision for third-quarter gross domestic product for 2017. What should stand out in this report is that this marked the strongest quarterly output...
The OECD is reporting that the global economy is on pace to have the best year of growth since 2010.
ISM has released its reading on manufacturing activity in October. While it is slightly lower than the prior reading, the reality is that it was at a 13-year high in September.
GDP is the barometer used to measure growth for economic expansion. Real GDP growth had not seen two consecutive quarterly growth rates of 3% or higher since 2014.