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May 17, 2008 3:46:32 AM CDT


Stories related to: US economy

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  • May 2008
    • Health Costs Hurt Insured Americans, Too

      Health Costs Hurt Insured Americans, Too

      Even Americans with health insurance are ducking the doctor these days as health costs rise and the economy stays queasy, the New York Times reports. Family premiums have doubled in recent years, and out-of-pocket costs have gone up, too: “It just keeps eating into people’s income,” said a utility worker in Tucson whose medical bills have risen by about $4,000 a year. More »

  • April 2008
    • Restaurants, Retailers Gulp as Consumers Tighten Belts

      Restaurants, Retailers Gulp as Consumers Tighten Belts

      The rising price of staples like milk and gas, coupled with layoffs and flat-lining wages, is creating a nation of penny-pinching consumers, the New York Times reports. Industry is taking notice as buyers substitute generic brands for top-of-the-line products and skip eating out at restaurants. More »

    • Bush Sees Rebate Checks Offsetting 'Slowdown'

      Bush Sees Rebate Checks Offsetting 'Slowdown'

      Again steering clear of the R-word, President Bush said today that the tax rebates scheduled to be distributed starting next week will "give our economy a boost to help us pull out of this economic slowdown," Bloomberg reports. More »

    • US Downturn Cuts Migrants' Payments Home

      US Downturn Cuts Migrants' Payments Home

      The downturn in the US economy is also hitting Mexico hard, the Washington Post reports. Money sent home from the US, known as remittances, dropped nearly 7% in January compared with the year before, the biggest plunge in 13 years, says the Mexican government. Without that money, the country's No. 2 source of foreign currency, many Mexicans can’t pay for basic needs. More »

    • Pelosi, Dems Hijack Colombia Free-Trade Deal

      Pelosi, Dems Hijack Colombia Free-Trade Deal

      Congressional Democrats thumbed their noses today at Bush's renewed efforts to pass a free-trade pact with Colombia. Bush sent the bill over Monday, mandating Congress to vote yea or nay within 90 days. Or so he thought. Nancy Pelosi is changing the House rules and won't allow a vote until the White House attends to more pressing domestic issues, the New York Times reports. More »

    • Dems Push New Aid Package as Job Market Swoons

      Dems Push New Aid Package as Job Market Swoons

      Democrats are calling for another stimulus package to help American workers as unemployment soars, the New York Times reports. Almost 250,000 American jobs have been lost since the beginning of the year—including 80,000 in March—leading one policy expert to say it's time the government switched focus from the housing crisis to the flagging job market. More »

    • US Drops 80,000 Jobs, Biggest Loss in 5 Years

      US Drops 80,000 Jobs, Biggest Loss in 5 Years

      Unemployment surged in March to 5.1%, the worst it’s been since September 2005, reports the Wall Street Journal. The country lost 80,000 non-farm jobs last month after dropping 76,000 jobs in both January and February. The third sharp drop fuels fears that the US has slipped into a recession and may prompt another interest rate cut by the Fed. More »

    • Troubled US off the Rails: Poll

      Troubled US off the Rails: Poll

      The vast majority of Americans are pessimistic about the nation's future and believe the problem-plagued US is heading in the wrong direction. More than 80% believe that “things have seriously gotten off on the wrong track.” That's the highest dissatisfaction rate since the New York Times/ CBS News poll began in the early 90s. The grim findings could spell big trouble for Republicans in November. More »

    • Bernanke: Adjustment Is Mostly Over

      Bernanke: Adjustment Is Mostly Over

      Ben Bernanke for the first time acknowledged the possibility of a US recession, but he also voiced optimism that “much” of the adjustment period was over, the Wall Street Journal reports. His testimony before Congress seemed to suggest an end to aggressive stimulus measures—noting that rates had already been cut “substantially” and inflation was still a “source of concern.” More »

    • Congress to Grill Bernanke on Bear Stearns

      Congress to Grill Bernanke on Bear Stearns

      Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke steps onto a tightrope today for two days of Congressional testimony focusing on the central bank’s starring role in the Bear Stearns bailout. Bernanke likely will be taken to task for not stepping in earlier, and more forcefully, to avert economic chaos, reports the New York Times . More »

  • March 2008
    • Lehman Is Selling $3B in Shares

      Lehman Is Selling $3B in Shares

      Lehman Brothers is selling $3 billion in new shares to allay fears after its stock dropped 42% this year, Bloomberg reports. "We still maintain that we don't need capital, but we've realized that perception is the dominant issue in today's markets,'' said CFO Erin Callan. Lehman fell up to 48% this month on rumors that it lacked cash and faced a Bear Stearns-style meltdown. More »

    • GDP Growth Weakest Since '02

      GDP Growth Weakest Since '02

      The US economy sputtered—as expected—in the fourth quarter of 2007, growing at the slowest rate since 2002, MarketWatch reports. Estimated growth of the US gross domestic product was 0.6% for the last three months of 2007, matching economists' forecasts. Consumer spending grew 2.3%, and exports increased 6.5%, both beating the Commerce Department’s predictions. More »

    • Feds Must Ward Off Stagnation, Clinton Says

      Feds Must Ward Off Stagnation, Clinton Says

      The government should step into the mortgage mess on a broader scale, Hillary Clinton told the Wall Street Journal yesterday, suggesting monetary policy alone can’t ignite a recovery and warning that procrastination could lead to stagnation similar to Japan’s weary economy. Clinton said the Federal Housing Administration should buy troubled mortgages in combination with a program to auction defaulted loans. More »

    • Boomers Move Back Home

      Boomers Move Back Home

      Young people have long fled recessionary job markets by moving back home, but the current crisis has a new demographic scurrying there: the middle-aged. "This is not like, 'OK, my son just graduated from college and needs to move back in' type of thing," says one financial planner, who has seen more adult children leaning on parents for everything from rent to groceries. More »

    • Fed Cuts Bank Discount Rate to Boost Liquidity

      Fed Cuts Bank Discount Rate to Boost Liquidity

      The Federal Reserve raced to buck up an anxious financial sector today by cutting its discount rate to banks by a quarter point, to 3.25%, the AP reports. It also created a new lending facility to aid investment banks with short-term loans. The moves are "designed to bolster market liquidity and promote orderly market functioning," the Fed said. "Liquid well-functioning markets are essential for the promotion of economic growth." More »

    • Consumer Prices Flat in Feb.

      Consumer Prices Flat in Feb.

      Consumer prices were flat for February, pleasantly surprising economists who expected a 0.2% increase, reports the Wall Street Journal . This morning’s consumer price index eases concerns that inflation is accelerating as the economy slows, and it gives the Federal Reserve more reason to float a large interest rate cut next week. A drop in energy prices was credited with the inflation relief, likely to be short-lived as this month's record oil and gas prices are factored into the next reports. More »

    • Fed Pours $200B Into Global Credit Relief Push

      Fed Pours $200B Into Global Credit Relief Push

      The Fed will inject huge quantities of cash into financial markets as part of a coordinated global attack on the credit crisis, Ben Bernanke announced today. The central bank will loan out another $200 billion, this time on a 28-day basis rather than overnight, the AP reports. The effort will coordinate with the European Central Bank and the central banks of Canada, England, and Switzerland. More »

    • Shops Shut as Wind Goes Out of Sales

      Shops Shut as Wind Goes Out of Sales

      Soaring gas prices and a still-boiling housing crisis are taking their toll on America's smaller retailers, with store bankruptcies and vacancy rates rising steadily as customers avoid impulse-buys that once fueled the industry's rapid expansion, reports AP. Vacancies hover between 7% and 8%, up from 5% just six months ago—and some analysts predict rates as high as 12.5% by the end of 2008. More »

    • Commercial Real Estate Will Slow, Not Tank

      Commercial Real Estate Will Slow, Not Tank

      The commercial real estate market has slowed dramatically, but won’t rival the housing implosion, reports the Wall Street Journal . Prices will likely fall just 20%, compared with 40%-plus for homes in some markets, and commercial property owners—unlike record numbers of homeowners facing foreclosure—have largely been able to keep mortgages current. More »

    • Part-Time Work Jumps 16% as Many Jobs Contract

      Part-Time Work Jumps 16% as Many Jobs Contract

      Tough economic times—and a drop in full-time jobs in some sectors—are pushing more people into part-time work, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Labor Department says 16% more workers—some 4.79 million people—are working part-time jobs this year than last, the highest total since 1993. More »

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