Search Results | Showing 961 - 970 of 1882 results for "GDP" |
| | | ... again and confidence falling back." Not us. The UK economy is still growing nicely, thank you very much. The BOE left its GDP growth forecast at 3.5% this year and tempered it a bit to 2.9% in 2015 (from 3.0% predicted in the August Quarterly Inflation ... |
| | | | ... sovereign debt in the financial system - which helped prop up economies after the financial crisis - is too large relative to GDP to be sustained unless interest rates remain low or growth surges well above expectations," explained the head of PIMCO ... |
| | | | ... he's been telling me that Australia was, and still is, in recession nearly four years ago now. Morgan Stanley lowered its GDP growth forecast to 3.2% (from 3.4%) this year -- not a big problem this side of the New Year. It is at the other side though ... |
| | | | ... The Economist. According to the magazine, "A 10% change in the oil price is associated with around a 0.2% change in global GDP, says Tom Helbling of the IMF. A price fall normally boosts GDP by shifting resources from producers to consumers, who are ... |
| | | | ... Day 2015. The government had the same good intention when it raised the consumption tax in 1997 - debt went from 91.2% of GDP in 1996 to 110.5% in 1998 because the economy slowed and contracted because of the higher tax. At the end of 2013, it was at ... |
| | | | ... from ANZ and wealth manager Macquarie Group, IG market strategist Stan Shamu said. "Investors are quite happy with the (US) GDP reading that came out much better than expected," he said. "That's helped us get off to a positive start, and that's been ... |
| | | | Perhaps they cheated and have had a little peep at the data, but last night's advance estimate of US third quarter real GDP growth confirmed the Fed's positive outlook on the economy and gave meat to its decision to end its quantitative easing programme. ... |
| | | | ... significantly deteriorated since February when the ECB/ESRB (European Systemic Risk Board) published its baseline forecast: GDP growth of 1.2% in 2014 and 1.8% in 2015 and 1.7% in 2016. Inflation of 1.0% in 2014 and 1.25% in 2015 and 1.50% in 2016. These ... |
| | | | ... just that... that China's growth rate would regress "toward the long-run global average (of about 2% growth per year in real GDP per person)". "Slowdowns often occur despite seemingly sound prospects: both Brazil in 1980 and Japan in 1991 looked like ... |
| | | | ... both tumbled 11 per cent. Investors are expected to pay particularly close attention to third-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) data from the world's number two economy, China, on Tuesday. The euro firmed to $US1.2781, compared with $US1.2759 late ... |
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