The federal government shutdown froze economic data releases, and agencies are still working to catch up. While a handful of reports have been rescheduled, some have also been consolidated or canceled ...
The week's economic calendar features several updates on the labor market, though some of the key data points including the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) and the January jobs report, ...
U.S. GDP grew in Q3, beating forecasts and showing surprising strength. Growth was driven by strong consumer spending, exports, and government outlays; investment and jobs showed weakness. Persistent ...
The ongoing partial government shutdown prevented the Labor Department from releasing the anticipated September jobs report as scheduled on Friday, causing economic data watchers to turn their ...
Wall Street anxiously awaits crucial information on inflation and job creation The longest U.S. government shutdown in history has ended, but the fallout is far from over. It appears that critical ...
A key report on the job market will not be published on Friday, as scheduled, as a result of the government shutdown. That means businesses and policymakers will be left guessing about the strength of ...
The ongoing government shutdown has disrupted the flow of economic data from federal agencies and the October jobs report is the latest closely watched report to be delayed due to the impasse. Most ...
A new economic report from the University of Virginia finds that job losses, inflation, and constraints to housing growth are ...
If you watch the financial news, you might feel overwhelmed by all of the statistics that now dominate these broadcasts. While reports on inflation, employment, housing, and geopolitical developments ...
(Bloomberg/Rita Nazareth) — Wall Street traders drove stocks lower amid a selloff in tech shares that have powered the surge from April’s meltdown. That’s despite economic data that did little to ...
There is growing recognition that current economic metrics fail to capture much of what really matters. When economic decision-making is narrowly focused on GDP growth, it leaves human rights behind.