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U.S. Economic Growth Is Revised Down to 2 Percent

The third quarter’s gross domestic product grew at a 2.0 percent annual rate, the Commerce Department said in a revised estimate, down from the previously estimated 2.5 percent.

 

Economy grows at 2.5% in third quarter, easing recession fears

Economy grows at 2.5% in third quarter, easing recession fears

The economy grew at an annual rate of 2.5% in the three months ending Sept. 30, the government reported, easing fears that the nation would fall into a second recession but still too slow a pace to cut significantly into the high unemployment rate.

Senh: At least we're not heading into another recession. Any growth is good right now.

 

Fourth-quarter GDP revised up to 3.1 percent

Fourth-quarter GDP revised up to 3.1 percent

The economy grew more quickly than previously estimated in the fourth quarter as businesses maintained fairly solid spending and restocked shelves to meet rising demand.

 

China GDP Expands 9.8%, Inflation Slows

China GDP Expands 9.8%, Inflation Slows

China's gross domestic product in the fourth quarter grew 9.8% from a year earlier, faster than the third quarter's 9.6% rise, which may increase market expectations for further tightening on monetary policy.

 

Look At The Real Numbers, The Recession Never Ended

The gross domestic product number came in at a rather soft 2% growth, up slightly from last quarter’s 1.7%. From the standpoint of creating new jobs, 2% just doesn’t cut it. We need about 100,000 to 125,000 new jobs a month just to keep up with population growth and a 2% GDP will not give us half that, as we saw last quarter. Most economists say you need about 3.5% GDP growth to get solid job reports.

 

Crossroads for the U.S. economy

Crossroads for the U.S. economy

On Friday, the government will offer crucial evidence when it reports on second-quarter economic growth. This will be the first in a series of indicators in the coming weeks that could help answer whether the economy has achieved cruising speed, in particular whether the private sector is growing fast enough to put unemployed Americans back to work. Forecasters are expecting that gross domestic product rose at a rate of 2 to 2.5 percent rate in the April-through-June quarter, which would be too slow to drive down the jobless rate.

 

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