It's now clear, the economy really wasn't roaring along
Tags: EDITORIALS; RECESSIONS; VOLATILITY (Finance); UNITED States -- Economic conditions
Related Articles
- What America Should Do Now. // Newsweek (Atlantic Edition);3/31/2008, Vol. 151 Issue 13, p44
The article presents a number of editorials on the credit market decline in the U.S. in 2008. Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin believes the U.S. Federal Reserve Board has handled the situation well. The vice chairman of General Motors, Bob Lutz, does not believe that the U.S. is in a...
- Our Great Recession Obsession. Samuelson, Robert J. // Newsweek;11/12/2007, Vol. 150 Issue 20, p66
The article presents an editorial discussing the social impact of an economic recession. The author believes that people panic when they hear about the possibility of a recession. He says that recessions are inevitable as part of the business-cycle theory of economics. The author considers the...
- What America Should Do Now. // Newsweek (Pacific Edition);3/31/2008, Vol. 151 Issue 13, p52
The article presents a number of editorials on the credit market decline in the U.S. in 2008. Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin believes the U.S. Federal Reserve Board has handled the situation well. The vice chairman of General Motors, Bob Lutz, does not believe that the U.S. is in a...
- Secret Weapon. Forbes, Steve // Forbes Asia;5/21/2007, Vol. 3 Issue 9, p15
The article comments on the trend in the U.S. economy. A study conducted by Senators Charles Schumer and Jim Webb on economic volatility showed that the U.S. economy has no more earnings volatility. In this regard, the author argues that the economy of the country is very adaptable to changing...
- Factors for a double-dip recession. Long, Brian G. // Grand Rapids Business Journal;7/12/2010, Vol. 28 Issue 28, p12
The article comments on the possible causes of double-dip economic recession in the U.S., which include high unemployment, level of consumer confidence, and the problem of depressed housing market.
- Blame game: Poor economy not fault of speculators. Samuelson, Robert J. // Fort Worth Business Press;7/7/2008, Vol. 22 Issue 26, p30
The author offers his views regarding the blame being put on financial speculators for the slowdown of the U.S. economy. Leading U.S. politicians find fault on speculators for piling into commodities markets and pushing prices to unconscionable levels. According to the author, lawmakers either...
- The Long and Large Decline in U.S. Output Volatility. Blanchard, Olivier; Simon, John // Brookings Papers on Economic Activity;2001, Issue 1, p135
This article analyzes the significance of decreased frequency of recessions to the decline in the variability of quarter-to-quarter changes in economic output in the U.S. Since the early 1980s the U.S. economy has gone through two long expansions. The first, from 1982 to 1990, lasted thirty-one...
- Here's a twist on market turmoil: Success breeds failure. Samuelson, Robert J. // Fort Worth Business Press;9/3/2007, Vol. 20 Issue 36, p34
The author comments on the popular suspects being blamed for the decline in the U.S. housing and credit markets. The author describes how the low short-term interest rates of the Federal Reserve Board affected the credit market. Mortgage bankers are also being blamed for the housing crisis since...
- Peru and Other Menaces. Will, George F. // Newsweek (Atlantic Edition);11/19/2007, Vol. 150 Issue 21, p68
This article offers the author's opinion on the U.S. economy in light of a unpredictable stock market during the second week of November 2007. The volatility in the market is being caused by things like the price of oil, the financial statement of General Motors, a threat by China to dump some...


