Pandemic disruptions, trade wars, and geopolitical turmoil have driven global economic uncertainty to unprecedented highs. The IMF measures country-level uncertainty by tracking uncertainty-related ...
The US has enjoyed dramatically larger economic growth so far this year than most other large developed countries in the world, economic data shows. US gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 2% in ...
The world is undergoing a great economic reordering, the third such transformation in the past century. The United States has been at the helm of each one, shaping the global economy in ways that ...
WASHINGTON, April 8 (Reuters) - Wars cause large and persistent economic losses in countries where fighting takes place, with output declining by roughly 7% over five years on average, and economic ...
Yet history repeatedly shows that no country becomes truly prosperous unless it develops strong human resources, vibrant democratic institutions, an honest judiciary, a healthy environment and ...
A version of this story appeared in CNN’s What Matters newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here. President Donald Trump wants Americans to see history his way, historians be damned.
The president thinks he can return America to manufacturing glory — but the cycles of economic history are hard to break. Credit...Photo illustration by Derek Brahney Supported by By Binyamin ...
Around the world, views of the economy are related to several factors. Public opinion responds to economic shocks, but we also see that some people’s views change significantly following political ...
Hoover Institution fellow Eyck Freymann explains what the Iran war and the blockade of the Straight of Hormuz reveals about modern economic chokepoints, geopolitics and war strategies.
The Golden State’s economy reached another milestone last year by jumping ahead of Japan to become the world’s fourth-biggest economy, according to new data from the International Monetary Fund.