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- 1From:The EconomistSpringtime in America, which is just around the corner, brings many fine traditions. The crack of the bat on baseball diamonds. Children rolling Easter eggs on the White House lawn. Families putting out dusty, old...
- 2From:The Economist"Choiceful, discerning, thoughtful" is how On the surface, Walmart looks like exhibit A for the optimists. Its comparable sales in America grew by a brisk 8.3%, year on year. Look closer, though, and its results are...
- 3From:Newsweek (Vol. 180, Issue 5)Byline: Giulia Carbonaro From the Great Resignation of 2021 to the "quiet quitting" trend that redefined the workplace in 2022, the American labor market has had a couple of tumultuous years. But in 2023, on the verge...
- 4From:The EconomistWith its trajectories, headwinds and tailwinds, the language of central banking abounds with aviation metaphors. Little surprise, then, that the policymaker's most heroic feat is named after Apollo 11's success in the...
- 5From:just-style.comByline: Laura Husband Leading US companies including Ford, McDonalds and UPS – and business experts – remain divided on whether high-interest rates, challenging labour markets and low consumer spending will...
- 6From:Country Report: HungaryWe now expect most major economies in the EU to narrowly avoid falling into technical recessions this year, but Hungary is unlikely to enjoy the same fate. Real GDP contracted on a quarterly basis in the third quarter of...
- 7From:The EconomistConsider the start of 2009 and see if it sounds familiar. A swathe of Europe was wondering how to keep itself warm after Russia cut off gas supplies over a dispute with Ukraine. A global shock the previous year had...
- 8From:The EconomistLast year markets had a terrible time. So far "Hello lower gas prices, bye-bye recession," cheered analysts at JPMorgan Chase, a bank, on January 18th, in a report on the euro zone. Nomura, a bank, has revised its...
- 9From:Chain Drug Review (Vol. 45, Issue 2)How could an economic downturn in 2023 impact the most vulnerable patients? If we look at lessons from past recessions, we see that increases in unemployment, inflation and financial stress significantly impact access to...
- 10From:The EconomistA struggle to survive The troubled east is a microcosm of Sudan's post-putsch crisis I N THE CENTRAL marketplace of Gedaref, eastern Sudan, Mohammed Siddig counts the cost of the past year's turmoil. The price of...
- 11From:The EconomistInvestors had an awful time in 2022. This year may be almost as bad A FTER A NIGHTMARISH 2022, shell-shocked investors have losses to recoup and plenty to ponder. There are asset-class allocations to be made,...
- 12From:The EconomistIt was meant to be a bloodbath. When covid-19 struck in early 2020, economists warned that a wave of job-killing robots would sweep over the labour market, leading to high and structural unemployment. One prominent...
- 13From:Compliance Week (Vol. 20, Issue 194)Nearly two-thirds of compliance professionals said their businesses are bracing for an economic recession and the financial turmoil it could bring, according to our "Inside the Mind of the CCO" survey. About 64 percent...
- 14From:AdAge (Vol. 93, Issue 17)Byline: Bradley Johnson The Ad Age World's Largest Advertisers rebounded from 2020 pandemic gloom to 2021 recovery boom, but spending growth slowed this year amid global tensions of inflation, rising interest rates and...
- 15From:The EconomistSturdy new-builds? Global property's goody-two-shoes are in trouble A HOUSING CRASH sent the global economy into recession between 2007 and 2009. But three countries--Australia, Canada and Sweden--cruised through the...
- 16From:Country Report: PolandWhat's happened? Real GDP expanded by 3.5% year on year and a seasonally adjusted 0.9% quarter on quarter in the third quarter of 2022, according to a preliminary flash estimate published by Statistics Poland (GUS)....
- 17From:New Statesman (Vol. 151, Issue 5693)The United Kingdom is confronting a grim but familiar problem: the country is poorer than it thought. Ever since the 2008 financial crisis, Britain has recorded anaemic economic growth. But it now faces something worse:...
- 18From:The EconomistEven recession may not bring down euro-zone inflation I T IS DIFFICULT to spot the peak when hiking in the fog. What is true in the Alps is just as true for policymakers who are struggling with inflation. In the euro...
- 19From:The EconomistAs costs rise, the outlook for corporate Britain is grim I T IS TEMPTING to see the madness in Westminster and conclude that hapless politicians are the sole cause of Britain's economic woes. They are not. As Liz...
- 20From:The EconomistThe Bank of England gives a grim assessment Taming inflation is an unpleasant task. On November 3rd Britain's monetary policymakers increased interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point, the sharpest rise in...