Consumer spending is back, thanks to services
Economic indicators have been improving, albeit slowly, since the summer of 2009, confirming that the economy is on the mend. However, most observers likely would agree that full recovery — a return to pre-recession activity levels — won't happen anytime soon.
Will the U.S. stay globally competitive? It depends
Jim Owens, chairman and chief executive officer of Caterpillar Inc., is "concerned that the U.S.
Don't count consumers out in recovery
Those who were not expecting consumers to play much of a role in the recovery have been pleasantly surprised by recent bullish reports from the stores and malls.
Economic outlook: The recession will be over when we stop losing jobs
We've heard since the middle of last year that the recession is over. Why, then, do people still seem so pessimistic? Why are consumers still so restrained? Why is the housing market still weak?
Arizona's budget crisis: How did we get here and where are we going?
Everyone knows that Arizona has been mired in a budget crisis — worse, even, than in many other states — for three years now. But last summer, the Governor's office and the Legislature announced that the budget (for fiscal year 2010) was finally balanced.
After economic meltdown: Recovery and lessons learned
Recovery from the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression remains incomplete, but most experts concur that the worst is behind us. Now economists, policy makers and analysts alike are asking, how did we get here?
The new currency deal: Alternatives to the dollar
The American dollar is the major currency for commerce around the globe. By some estimates, the dollar is used in nearly half of all world trade, and has long played a vital role in domestic economies from Africa to the former USSR.
Update: Jobs and incomes fell in the Western states in 2009
Final revised state figures for 2009 have just become available for two key indicators: nonfarm employment (from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics) and personal income (from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis).
Can the world spend its way out of recession?
In the aftermath of recession, experts and international agencies such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) often advise this strategy: countries are told to hold tight on currency flows as part of a painful set of austerity measures, let exchange rates drop, then boost exports and productivi
No 'great recovery' from the Great Recession
In 2009, inflation-adjusted output (Gross Domestic Product) fell by -2.4 percent. This was the largest one-year decrease in GDP since the Great Depression, causing economists to dub this contraction as the Great Recession.