Category Archives: Economy news

Real Estate Key To Recovery

Well, it’s official: The Great Recession started in 2007 and ended in 2009, but over a year later Americans, not to mention much of the world, are still trying to recover from its profound effects. Curiously, retail receipts for the most recent holiday shopping season seem to be the most robust in all of three years, even as the housing market keeps tumbling in value. Now since home prices and retail sales are highly esteemed indicators to economists, the contradictory picture being painted here speak to a weak recovery at best.

Despite the record profits, there is a hiring freeze throughout Corporate America. Credit is tight despite extremely low interest rates. Of course, who gives out hundreds of dollars right now – or, even, take it on – with all the uncertainty? It’s quite a conundrum, and no one wants to be the first to try to break it.

Only twenty-one thousand homes were sold nationwide this past November, a record low for just one month. Savvy shoppers, however, can take advantage of these conditions, which have lead to low prices throughout the entire real estate market, even for properties in New York City.

It’s a singular situation that even professionals such as real estate developer Isaac Toussie have not seen before, with prices continuing to decline!

The situation is much, much worse in cities such as Cleveland, Minneapolis, and even Dallas, darlings of the 1990s.

Whatever the case wherever it may be, an improvement will depend on one thing: jobs. Yet with no strong sustained positives in real estate – which account for new purchases of durable goods – what chance will there be for the outlook on jobs?

It’s a vicious chicken-or-egg cycle.

That’s why many observers believe the government must step in much more vigorously, with much more money, spent with much more care.

Readers who are trying to find information about the topic of managed forex trading, visit the web site that was quoted in this paragraph.

Obama vs. business takes another sour turn

After a high-profile effort to smooth things over with Big Business, the Obama administration has hit a bump in the road.

What happens if Congress blows the debt ceiling?

Some Republican lawmakers are challenging Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s warnings about the grave consequences of not raising the country’s debt ceiling.

Oil price spike: Speculators aren’t to blame

High oil prices are here to stay and they’re caused by surging demand and limited new supply, not Wall Street speculators.

Employers tap interns for full-time jobs

Employers recruited more than half their interns for full-time positions last year, the highest rate of intern-to-staff hiring in a decade, according to survey results released Thursday.

Economic recovery stumbles

Economic growth slowed to a crawl in the first three months of the year as a spike in gasoline, higher overall inflation and continued weakness in the housing market all took a toll on the recovery.

Page 1 of 21012345102030...Last »