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Wall Street economists disagree on what’s behind a sharp slowdown in US job growth, highlighting a divide that is central to ...
Most economists say that the Bureau of Labor Statistics is a nonpolitical agency staffed by people obsessed with getting the ...
Markets reasserted themselves this week following last week’s sell-off, largely ignoring the firing of the lead government ...
The president fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner on Friday after poor job numbers. A Federal Reserve governor ...
Businesses, investors and the Fed are all operating under a cloud of uncertainty from Trump’s tariff policy. The latest moves ...
6don MSN
Wall Street poised to open with gains after last week's jobs numbers triggered investor sell-off
Wall Street was on track to open with gains on Monday following Friday's sell-off that was triggered by fears of a slowing ...
Big question marks still loom for the Fed, and while the jobs report last Friday was weak, the unemployment rate remains low.
Wall Street analysts underestimated June’s U.S. jobs report, expecting weak growth due to negative private payroll data and President Trump’s angry social media posts. Today, analysts have ...
Our top story so far, sticking with our summer movie theme, just like Jason Voorhees, the job market just keeps coming back when after everyone declares it dead.
This implies that the weak gains in payrolls in recent months might have something to do with the supply of labor.” ...
Wall Street's main indexes opened higher on Monday after a sharp pullback in the previous session, as markets priced in ...
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