The WSJ’s latest survey shows that forecasters expect higher inflation than they did in October—but also higher GDP growth.
President Donald Trump has pledged cheaper prices and lower interest rates, but an economy transformed by the pandemic will make those promises difficult to keep.
By Darya Korsunskaya, Guy Faulconbridge and Gleb Stolyarov MOSCOW (Reuters) -President Vladimir Putin has grown increasingly ...
Several organizations, including the International Monetary Fund, have recently singled out the U.S. as an especially ...
Recently Long channeled the aforementioned editorial with confident commentary asserting that “The Chinese economy is ...
President Trump, starting his second term, began a slew of executive actions by rescinding 78 Biden-era executive orders, ...
Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff said rate cuts were a "pipe dream" and warned the soaring US national debt could fuel ...
The UK has a growth problem. Can it harness artificial intelligence to help solve it, without sacrificing its climate ...
Russia says it's withstanding the impact of sanctions. Sweden's finance minister says satellite images show a different story ...
The economy rebounded strongly from the COVID shock, but the U.S. continues to grapple with a cost-of-living crisis and ...
When President Barack Obama took the oath of office in January 2009, unemployment was surging, markets were plunging and families were losing their homes. He inherited an economic calamity.