Forecasters believe the economy grew at a fast pace in the third quarter, though the report was delayed by the government shutdown and the data is getting stale.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will hold its ninth annual Richard Goode Lecture on November 27, 2023. The Richard Goode Lecture is an annual event hosted by the Fiscal Affairs Department for ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Bill Conerly connect the dots between the economy ... and business! The economic forecast for 2025 shows growth, but at a slower ...
Prof Amir Sufi urges shift from low-tech industry to innovation-driven services; calls for new lending models for intangible ...
Discover what defines a sluggish economy, its characteristics, and its impact on businesses and employment. Learn how it ...
As the saying goes, there are no stupid questions. In that generous spirit, it’s certainly legitimate to ask why a continually growing economy is a good thing. Why does GDP have to keep going up?
Since 2015, when the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were introduced, trillions of dollars have been invested in sustainability efforts, thousands of initiatives have been ...
We expect gross domestic product growth to weaken over the next year before beginning to reaccelerate as the effects of Federal Reserve rate cuts start to kick in. We still expect growth to remain ...
To transition from cyclical stagnation to sustainable, inclusive growth, Liberia needs to undergo five significant transformations. These include reshaping the macro-economy by increasing domestic ...
For nearly 200 years, two transformative global forces have grown in tandem: economic activity and carbon emissions. The two have long been paired together, or, in economist-speak, “coupled.” When the ...
How fast can the American economy grow with better policy from Washington? Investor Scott Bessent, President Trump’s Treasury pick, proposes an ambitious “3-3-3 plan” targeting three percent GDP ...
The annual forecast is produced by the UGA Selig Center for Economic Growth, which has tracked Georgia's economy for more than four decades.