Poll finds rising concern over shutdown impact on economy
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According to Trump’s treasury secretary, the economy isn’t just struggling in some areas — some “sectors” are actually contracting.
More than 7 in 10 Americans say current economic conditions in the country are "poor" or "very poor in a new CNN/SSRS poll.
Research from the JPMorganChase Institute points to another risk. Analysis of its in-house database of account holders showed inflation-adjusted income growth among those aged 25 to 54, a key consumer demographic, had slipped from around 3% annually to 2%, on par with the sluggish rate after the 2007-2009 financial crisis and recession.
Trump’s overall approval rating sits at 43%, while just 34% of registered voters say he has “lived up” to expectations on the economy, 33% say he has “looked out for the middle class” and 30% say he met expectations on inflation, according to a new NBC News poll released Sunday.
U.S. economists may be barely holding on by their fingernails over the current state of the American economy, but strangely, consumers don’t seem to care. Here’s why.
A sweeping new survey of 3,000 registered Latino voters across the country finds that economic anxiety continues to dominate the political mood heading into the 2026 midterm elections, with cost of living,
The Congressional Budget Office issued projections Wednesday for three different scenarios about the length of the government shutdown as it nears a full month.
Poland and other countries across Europe that found economic success in an era of collaboration are now facing a crumbling of international alliances.
See key challenges in commercial real estate as rising debt and delinquencies threaten economic stability. Click for my look at how CRE is affecting the economy.
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said on Tuesday the economy has turned a corner as risks related to geopolitics and corporate governance have been easing, which has boosted the local Kospi stock index beyond the 4,
Credit loan data aligns with what some economists are calling a K-shaped economy, one where higher-income earners are spending as they usually would on discretionary purchases like travel and premium goods, while lower-income earners cut back on dining out or trading down on purchases at the grocery store.