Search Results | Showing 1421 - 1430 of 1883 results for "GDP" |
| | | ... freely floating Australian dollar as helper. This means that despite the pause in the September quarter when Australia's real GDP growth slowed to only 0.2 per cent -- from 1.1 per cent in the first, things are still going good for the poor little rich ... |
| | | | ... its finance ministry even boasted last night that the country's deficit could decline to the European Union's 3 per cent of GDP limit next year. So no "extraordinary" juice... at least for now. Because having tasted blood, bond market vigilantes will ... |
| | | | ... index futures contract was down five points at 4,588, with 16,253 contracts traded. Australian real gross domestic product (GDP) rose by a seasonally adjusted 0.2 per cent in the September quarter, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics figures ... |
| | | | ... that no inflation to erode your purchasing power. Anything Australia is safe. Again... maybe. If today's third quarter real GDP growth report does not turn out as bad as many expect. But even if it did, China's committing seppuku (yeah, I know it's a ... |
| | | | ... less spending, less economic growth, less government revenues - plus protests and riots on the side. At best, the debt to GDP ratio stays at the same high level. Back to square one. And this is why I am convinced that eventually, despite continued protestations ... |
| | | | ... when the ABS releases its estimates next week. The Australian Financial Review quote Westpac halving its third quarter real GDP growth forecast from 0.6 per cent to 0.3 per cent. And if that's not bad enough, it also printed that ANZ Bank predicts no ... |
| | | | ... damage caused by human activity in 2008 represented a monetary value of $ 6.6 trillion, equivalent to 11 per cent of global GDP, according to a study by PRI and UNEP Finance Initiative. |
| | | | ... US$46.5 bil in the previous month and expectations of US$45.0 bil. This should contribute to an upward adjustment in real GDP when the second estimate is released. And who said lower interest rates are not working. Last night, the Mortgage Bankers Association ... |
| | | | ... momentum, up 1.1 points over the month. The lead from the ISM index confirms consensus predictions for 2.5 per cent growth in US GDP next year. What's wrong with that? Surely for a mature economy like America, 2.5 per cent growth is good enough, especially ... |
| | | | ... (Australian equities) which isn't growing anywhere near as fast," he said. "That pool of assets will probably grow in line with GDP, while the pool of dollars could grow three times that rate." |
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