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Inflation track this thread

Started by Robinthieu; Last updated by Robinthieu | View history

Inflation

Inflation is a rise in general level of prices of goods and services over time.

Stories

Stories 61 - 80 of 114

  • March 2008
    • Fed 'Will Get on Top of This,' Says Bernanke Mentor

      Fed 'Will Get on Top of This,' Says Bernanke Mentor

      (Newser) - Ben Bernanke has the savvy to inject enough liquidity into the US economy to push it through the current credit crisis, says a leading economist who advised the Fed chief's MIT doctoral thesis. “The Fed will get on top of this,” said Stanley Fischer, ahead of this afternoon's meeting in which the board was expected to announce a rate cut of up to 1%. More »

    • Tokyo Recovers, Shanghai Falls Again

      Tokyo Recovers, Shanghai Falls Again

      (Newser) - Markets in Tokyo had an up day, recovering some of yesterday's major losses as investors speculated that Japan will stand firm in the face of an economic slowdown. Insurers led the gains on the Nikkei, which rose 1.5%. Other Asian bourses also did well Tuesday, but China was an exception, reports Bloomberg: on fears of an interest-rate cut, the Shanghai-Shenzhen CSI 300 index slumped 5.2% to an 8-month low. More »

    • Conservatives Lead 'Cooked' Iran Vote

      Conservatives Lead 'Cooked' Iran Vote

      (Newser) - Early results in Iran's elections today are no surprise—conservatives will keep power—but they are expected to be more critical of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Reuters reports. Some are teaming with reformists to fight the president's economic policies, which have let inflation rise to 19%. Reformists also picked up seats despite having many candidates disqualified. More »

    • 'Perfect Storm' Batters US Economy

      'Perfect Storm' Batters US Economy

      (Newser) - A perfect storm of economic maladies has the US economy reeling on the edge of recession and officials struggling to limit the damage it causes, reports the New York Times. But many economists say there isn’t much the government or policy makers can do besides batten down the hatches and, in the words of a Charles Schwab analyst, “let the system wash it out.”