The Daily Overview on MSN
GDP swings and 3% inflation: What the numbers really say about the economy
Headline GDP and inflation figures are sending mixed signals as the United States heads into 2026. Growth looks surprisingly ...
New figures show a stronger performance than many feared, but the headline figure suggests a vitality that is deceptive, as ...
Third quarter U.S. GDP numbers showed growth crushing consensus estimates. This serves as a bullish indicator for the stock market (SPY) because it shows that the economy may be on a much stronger ...
The US economy grew at an unexpectedly strong pace of 4.3% in the third quarter — the highest rate in two years — according to a government report released Tuesday. Vigorous consumer spending on ...
On paper, these are good times for the U.S. economy. The latest GDP numbers show growth was at 3.3% in the second quarter. Business investment is up. The unemployment rate remains low, and the ...
However, not all recent economic news has been bad. There are reasons for optimism despite the obvious challenges ahead. GDP surged in the third quarter coming in at 4.3% (3.8% adjusted for inflation, ...
No amount of narrative-setting can convince American voters that the economy is better or worse than their own experience dictates.
Steve Forbes calls for a major overhaul in how GDP data is interpreted and released, urging the Trump Administration to make a crucial change as it reforms the BLS job growth statistical gathering.
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