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A recent Wall Street Journal poll of American voters in swing states found that while people think the national economy is in bad shape, they feel good about their personal finances. In Gallup polling from last April, just 16% rated the economy as “good” or “excellent,” but 45% said their personal finances were “good” or “excellent.”But according to available data the economy has improved. But the dichotomy between how people feel about their own finances and the economy at large presents a different conundrum. It’s important to look at consumer behavior and not just sentiment when determining how Americans feel about the economy, said Harris. Those behaviors signal that Americans, overall, actually feel pretty good about their economy.
Persons: New York CNN — Nathan Frederiksen, , , ” Frederiksen, It’s, “ We’ve, I’ve, ” He’s, , Wisconsin —, Joe Biden, Ben Harris, else’s, ” Harris, Harris, Jonathon Barricklow, Barricklow, we’d, Dave Koloskee, he’ll, Megan McCoy, we’re, ” McCoy, Julie Levitch, Suze Orman, she’s, I’m, ’ ”, , they’re Organizations: New, New York CNN, CNN, Gallup, Economic, Brookings, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Facebook, Kansas State University, , Finance, LinkedIn Locations: New York, Boise , Idaho, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina , Nevada , Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, it’s, United States, Bowling Green , Ohio, East, Europe, Erie , Pennsylvania, Scottsdale , Arizona
The Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse has blocked shipments in and out of the Port of Baltimore. The port is a key shipping point for cars, construction and farm equipment, and coal. The Port of Baltimore is the top US port for roll-on/roll-off cargo, like cars and construction machinery. halbergman/Getty ImagesCoal, gypsum, and sugarIn 2022, coal was among the top export commodities by weight moved through the Port of Baltimore. A research briefing from Oxford Economics said the bridge collapse will likely have a greater impact on the local Baltimore economy than on a national level.
Persons: Francis Scott Key, , Dali, Daraius Irani, Anirban Basu, Ford, Basu, Domino, Sugar, Irani Organizations: Service, Industry, Regional Economic Studies, Towson University, Sage Policy, General Motors, Caterpillar, Port, Baltimore Refinery, Oxford Economics Locations: Port of Baltimore, Port, Baltimore, Patapsco, India, West Virginia
Experts told Business Insider that the port alone contributes $15 million in daily economic activity, which will come to a near standstill "until further notice." While some cargo will have to wait, container ships can largely be rerouted to other east coast locations. Ryan Peterson, the CEO of global logistics firm Flexport, told Business Insider that 800 containers of his were destined for Baltimore, and are now being rerouted. And it's unclear whether East Coast ports will have enough available capacity to absorb Baltimore's container volume, Petersen said. A risk for Baltimore will be whether those route changes are temporary, or if they'll have a lasting impact on the port's business.
Persons: , Baltimore's Francis Scott Key, Port, Anirban Basu, It's, Basu, Daraius Irani, Ryan Peterson, Petersen, we're, Martin Dresner Organizations: Service, Business, Sage Policy, Regional Economic Studies, Towson University, University of Maryland's Smith School of Business Locations: Port of Baltimore, Baltimore, East Coast, West Coast
The Port of Baltimore is closed "until further notice" following the collapse of a major bridge. Experts say the closure alone will bring some $15 million of daily economic activity to a halt. Experts told Business Insider that the port alone contributes $15 million in daily economic activity, which will come to a near standstill "until further notice." While some cargo will have to wait, container ships can largely be rerouted to other east coast locations. And it's unclear whether East Coast ports will have enough available capacity to absorb Baltimore's container volume, Petersen said.
Persons: , Baltimore's Francis Scott Key, Port, Anirban Basu, It's, Basu, Daraius Irani, Ryan Peterson, Petersen, we're, Martin Dresner Organizations: Service, Sage Policy, Regional Economic Studies, Towson University, University of Maryland's Smith School of Business Locations: Port, Baltimore, Port of Baltimore, East Coast, West Coast
"We were in a situation where folks accepted that Black unemployment was going to always be high and there was nothing that they could do about it. The Black unemployment rate in January was 5.3%, up a touch from December but still near the all-time low of 4.8% hit in April 2023. For Black workers, weekly before-tax earnings as of the end of 2023 have risen 24.8% since the first quarter of 2020. "High unemployment for Black workers is a solvable problem," Fulton said. Black workers are interested in tech and believe there are opportunities.
Persons: Ali, Jamila Wright, there's, Jessica Fulton, Fulton, Cox, she's, MilSpouse, they've, Sue Harnett, Goldman Sachs, Harnett, I'm, Ali Wright Organizations: Brooklyn Tea, Joint Center, Political, Economic Studies, D.C, U.S . Bureau of Labor Statistics, McKinsey & Company, Companies, Bank of America, Black Colleges, Universities, New, Small Business Administration, Ivy League, Conference Board Locations: America, U.S, Washington, Brooklyn, New York City, Atlanta
1: By waging war outside its own bordersOne critical reason Russia's economy is still ticking is because of the location of the war. AdvertisementConsider the impact of the war on the economies of both Russia and Ukraine. In 2022, the first year of the war, Russia's economy contracted 1.2%, according to official statistics. Russia was facing a demographic crisis with a declining population and falling fertility rate even before its war with Ukraine. 4: By stimulating and steadying its economy with subsidies and policiesGovernment subsidies, spending, and policies are also propping up Russia's economy.
Persons: , Hassan Malik, Loomis Sayles, it's, Malik, Vladimir Putin's, Sergei Guriev, Malik isn't, Alex Isakov, Putin, Alexandra Prokopenko Organizations: Service, Business, Reuters, US, Exchange, European Bank for Reconstruction, Bloomberg Economics, Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies Locations: Russia, Moscow, Boston, Crimea, Ukraine, Russian, China, India, Austrian
Today, remote work has declined from its levels of the pandemic but is still – depending on how broadly one measures it – three to four times as prevalent as it was in 2019. And remote work tends to be dominated by higher-educated employees, with nearly 40% of those holding advanced degrees hybrid or fully remote. In early January, LinkedIn’s Global State of Remote and Hybrid Work study found that at its peak, in April of 2022, the share of job postings that offered remote work reached 20.3%. The more enduring feature of remote work is now hybrid.”There are also substantial differences within industry and among countries. “You’re moving to where the housing is cheaper.”Not that it is all rosy when it comes to remote work.
Persons: , Kory Kantenga, Sandra Moran, Julia Pollak, Nick Bunker, Layla O’Kane, Lightcast, Morris Davis, Andra Ghent, Jesse Gregory, ” Goldman Sachs, Boyer, Brad Case, “ That’s, Software’s Moran Organizations: LinkedIn, Workforce Software, LinkedIn’s Global, Labor Statistics, North, , Oxford University Press, Economic Studies, Rutgers University, Andra, University of Utah, University of Wisconsin, Ivory, Google, NASA, Middleburg Communities, Green Mountain Locations: U.S, Israel, Ghent, Real Estate, Santa Ana , California, LLC.org . New York, Huntsville , Alabama, Huntsville, Glendale , Arizona, Phoenix, Arlington , Texas, Dallas, Middleburg, San Francisco, New York, Charlotte, Raleigh , North Carolina, Orlando, Jacksonville , Florida, Houston, San Antonio , Texas, Florida, Texas, Vermont, Green Mountain State, California
The unrest in France is also likely tied to how some French people feel about the country’s political atmosphere more broadly. The National Rally also garnered the highest percentage support among France’s political parties in a mid-December poll. In 2022, nearly half of France’s immigrant population had been born in Africa, with the top source countries being Algeria and Morocco, according to INSEE. The French president said in December that the immigration law is “what the French wanted.” And at least one recent poll appears to echo this. And nearly three-quarters (73%) thought the law was inspired by the ideas of the National Rally party.
Persons: Emmanuel Macron, Pen, , Élisabeth Borne, Le Pen’s, Macron –, , Macron Organizations: Republicans, National, Constitutional, Ministry, People, AP, Le, National Institute of Statistics, Economic Studies, National Rally Locations: France, Europe, Germany, Western Europe, Africa, Algeria, Morocco, North Africa
NEW YORK (AP) — The squabble over billion of dollars in overdraft fees that Americans get charged every year is intensifying. While banks have drastically cut back on overdraft fees in the past decade, the nation's biggest banks still take in roughly $8 billion in overdraft fees every year, according to data from the CFPB and bank public records. Political Cartoons View All 253 ImagesBanks charge a customer an overdraft fee if their bank account balance falls below zero. What started off as a courtesy offered to some customers, the popularity of debit cards beginning in the 1990s led to Americans wracking up tens of billions of dollars in overdraft fees. While big banks have cut back on overdraft fees, smaller banks have not, and a number of them heavily rely on overdrafts to be profitable, industry analysts said.
Persons: Biden, “ It's, Joe Biden, , Greg McBride, , Aaron Klein, ” Klein, Rohit Chopra, ” Chopra, Chopra, Barack Obama, Carter Dougherty, overdrafts, can’t Organizations: Consumer Financial, Biden Administration, Federal Trade Commission, Bank of America, Banking, Bankrate, Brookings Institution, Armed Forces Bank, Republican, Trump Administration, American Bankers Association, Financial Reform
Economists were expecting the annual overall inflation rate to tick higher, to 3.2% from the 3.1% headline reading the month before, according to FactSet consensus estimates. Despite the acceleration, the annual rate of consumer-level inflation is down considerably from December 2022’s rate of 6.5%; additionally, a closely watched measure of underlying inflation slowed further. In December, core goods prices were flat, an apparent stalling out after six months of declines. Rising shelter costs have kept core services elevated. The central bank has a target inflation rate of 2%, as measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, which has its latest reading due out later this month.
Persons: , ” Wendy Edelberg, ” “, , Brian Coulton, Fitch, ” Scott Anderson, Jerome Powell, Joe Brusuelas, Organizations: New, New York CNN, of Labor Statistics, BLS, The Hamilton Project, Brookings, CNN, Federal, BMO, CPI, PCE, RSM Locations: New York, November’s
That’s the lowest annual increase registered since June 2021 and a far cry from the 11.8% increase registered in December 2022. Overall food prices were up 0.2% on a monthly basis, matching the rate of increase seen in November, CPI data shows. Eggs and ham prices went up the most in December as compared to other food categories tracked in the CPI. Ham prices rose 2.6% for the month (2.9% excluding canned ham), BLS data showed. The latest Consumer Price Index showed that grocery prices rose only 1.3% for the year ended in December.
Persons: New York CNN —, Bill Adams, chow, Wendy Edelberg, Ash Organizations: New, New York CNN, Bureau of Labor Statistics ’, Comerica Bank, CPI, The Hamilton Project, Brookings, CNN, Bloomberg Locations: New York, Ham, United States
The shutdowns of 2020 created a perfect storm for the housing market — and supercharged the clash between Wall Street and regular homebuyers. Given the attention these markets received during the pandemic, it's no wonder that the battle between Wall Street and Main Street became the dominant story of COVID-era homebuying. Advertisement"If Wall Street was really gobbling up Main Street," Sharga told me, "we would see homeownership rates go down." Wall Street landlords have also been increasingly selling off homes to regular people, a Business Insider analysis found. Still circlingWhile average homebuyers have staged a comeback over the past three years, Wall Street isn't ready to jump out of the housing market altogether.
Persons: homebuyers, That's, Wall, elbowed, Rick Sharga, CJ Patrick Company, they're, who've, Axios, Sharga, CoreLogic, Pretium —, John Voorheis, Voorheis, , Freddie Mac, James Rodriguez Organizations: Rage, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Parcl Labs, Labs, National Association of Realtors, Wall Street, Investor, Wall, Tricon, Associates, Investors, Center for Economic Studies, Census Locations: Phoenix, Chicago, homebuilders, homeownership, Dallas, Charlotte, North Carolina, Atlanta
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is nurturing economic ties this week with Asia, but he's not signing any trade deals at a regional summit in San Francisco. This fact — no trade deals — reveals a lot about the status of U.S. politics, the evolving global economy and the Biden administration's own ambitions. The trade pillar is being overseen by U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai, while the other three are under Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. WHY TRADE DEALS ARE UNPOPULARIt's simple: Voters say past trade deals caused the loss of factory jobs that hollowed out their hometowns and the Biden administration agrees. In a June speech, Tai criticized past trade deals.
Persons: Joe Biden, he's, , Biden, , , Robert Holleyman, ” Biden, Katherine Tai, Gina Raimondo, Matthew Goodman, Sen, Sherrod Brown, Brown, ” Brown, Republican Donald Trump, Democrat Hillary Clinton, Trump, Tai Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S, Economic Cooperation, Biden, U.S . Trade, ., Greenberg Center, Geoeconomic Studies, Council, Foreign Relations, White, Republican, Democrat, Pacific, China . Trade, Trump, ” Trade, South Locations: Asia, San Francisco, IPEF, U.S, Tokyo, Australia, Brunei, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Ohio, Canada, Mexico, China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNot surprised by Moody's negative U.S. outlook, former economic advisor to Biden saysBen Harris, VP and director of economic studies at the Brookings Institute and former U.S. assistant secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy, discusses the U.S. economy and political landscape.
Persons: Biden, Ben Harris Organizations: Brookings Institute, Treasury, Economic
Why the U.S. won't change physical cash
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( Mark Licea | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
The Federal Reserve will spend $931.4 million to print bills in 2023 — but there's a problem with U.S. cash. Physical currency has been updated around the world but not in the U.S., and while an increasing number of Americans are ditching cash for electronic payments, experts say cash isn't going away. In 2017, the $100 bill surpassed the $1 bill as the most popular currency denomination. Some speculate that the rise in $100 bills in circulation may be to avoid taxes or for illegal activity. … In the 1960s, the half dollar lost its place because it wasn't included in the use of parking meters," said Mudd.
Persons: Aaron Klein, Douglas Mudd, Franklin Noll, Mudd Organizations: Federal Reserve, Brookings Institute, CNBC, American Numismatic Association, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Payments, U.S Locations: U.S
CNN —Large swaths of Ghana are facing power blackouts due to gas shortages at a major power facility, the nation’s power operator said, compounding the country’s worst economic crisis in decades. The West African nation has battled power outages, known locally as “dumsor” for many years. “Dumsor is fully back, no announced timetables, no communication, nothing, just frequent random power outages,” one Ghanian said of the latest power cut on X, formerly known as Twitter. Recent studies expect the country’s energy crisis to worsen over the coming years, starting from this year. “Ghana’s energy supply requires urgent, purposeful and significant investment to undo the current precarious situation the country finds itself,” said research and policy think tank, Centre for Socioeconomic Studies (CSS).
Persons: , Ghanian, GRIDCo, Organizations: CNN, Ghana Grid Company, , World Bank Locations: Ghana, Tema, Accra
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailUnrealized losses on bank balance sheets have restricted lending, says Bridge 2 Partners' GrahamPaul Graham, lending and data governance practice leader at Bridge 2 Partners, and Aaron Klein, senior fellow in economic studies at The Brookings Institute, join 'The Exchange' to discuss unrealized losses on bank balance sheets leading to tighter lending standards, whether banks should receive a bailout for unrealized losses, and what a TARP 2.0 could look like.
Persons: Graham Paul Graham, Aaron Klein Organizations: Partners, Brookings Institute
Vladimir Putin bet his economy on a long war, ramping up military production and raising wages. An expert told Insider keeping Russia's economy stable is critical to prevent regime collapse. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementAdvertisementVladimir Putin has fully transitioned the Russian economy toward wartime production, betting his country's financial and manufacturing systems can outlast the West's until Russia sees a military victory in Ukraine. As long as the country maintains some semblance of the status quo in the economy, English said he doesn't expect to see things changing.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Robert English, , Putin, Vasily Astrov Organizations: Service, Kremlin, Street Journal, Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, ., Government of, Russian Federation, University of Southern Locations: Russia, USSR, Ukraine, Russian, University of Southern California
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMarket shock may finally move Washington on Medicare reform, says AEI's James PethokoukisAaron Klein, senior fellow in economic studies at The Brookings Institute, Chris Kotowski, senior research analyst at Oppenheimer, and James Pethokoukis, American Enterprise Institute senior fellow, join 'Power Lunch' to react to JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon's remarks on the economy, Fed, and banks.
Persons: AEI's James Pethokoukis Aaron Klein, Chris Kotowski, Oppenheimer, James Pethokoukis, Jamie Dimon's Organizations: Brookings Institute, American Enterprise Institute senior Locations: Washington
Experts say the technology will help address a steep and prolonged slowdown in productivity growth in many Western economies, which has kept businesses’ costs higher than they would otherwise be and made inflation harder to tame. “AI has huge potential to increase productivity,” BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said at the company’s Investor Day last month. Productivity gains in Europe could be similar, albeit slightly smaller, Brynjolfsson told CNN. In some cases, productivity gains could be achieved sooner. That’s because most generative AI tools live on the internet — “the technology we already have on our desks” — making them widely accessible, Brynjolfsson said.
Persons: chatbot, , Smart, Hannes P Albert, Bill Gates, Larry Fink, Erik Brynjolfsson, ” David McMillan, ” McMillan, Hollie Adams, Neil Shearing, Martin Neil Baily, Anton Korinek, Brynjolfsson, Goldman Sachs, Organizations: London CNN, Microsoft, BlackRock, CNN, Stanford University, Organisation for Economic Cooperation, Development, OECD, University of Stirling, Bloomberg, Getty, , National Statistics, IBM, Capital, Brookings Institute, University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business, America, Productivity, Google, SAP, Goldman Locations: East, Scotland, London, United Kingdom, United States, Europe, Wimbledon
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFedNow's instant payments will help reduce fees overdraft fees, says Brookings' Aaron KleinDan Dolev, managing director at Mizuho Securities, and Aaron Klein, senior fellow in economic studies at The Brookings Institute, join 'The Exchange' to discuss the upcoming launch of FedNow instant payments, how the FedNow system could help close the income inequality gap, and the stock impact of rapid payment systems.
Persons: Brookings, Aaron Klein Dan Dolev, Aaron Klein Organizations: Mizuho Securities, Brookings Institute
She led some of her Democratic colleagues in introducing an amendment to remove the new SNAP work requirements from the debt-ceiling bill. "Come see me in a year, and I'll show you how much we actually saved," McCarthy told reporters on Tuesday night. How the work requirements will impact employmentDespite McCarthy and Republicans' belief that work requirements will bolster employment, some experts aren't so sure. Work requirements in SNAP have increased employment less; in Medicaid, they appear to have had little effect on employment." "I think it goes to the principle of this bureaucratic red tape that we call work requirements," Jayapal said.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Kevin McCarthy, Biden, McCarthy, — McCarthy, Cori Bush, Lauren Bauer, there's, Bauer, Bernard Yaros, it's, Yaros, Congressional Progressive Caucus Pramila Jayapal, Jayapal Organizations: SNAP, CBO, Service, Supplemental, Assistance, Democratic, Office, White, Economic, Brookings Institution, The, Brookings, Moody's, Congressional Progressive Caucus Locations: Missouri, TANF
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBank execs and regulators failed to hedge risks prior to fallout: Brookings' Aaron KleinAaron Klein, senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution, and John Maxfield, president of the Substack 'Maxfield on Banks', join 'The Exchange' to discuss the Senate hearings on recent bank failures, who is to blame for the banking crisis, and the role of regulators in banking.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBank supervision should be taken from the Fed, says Brookings' Aaron KleinAaron Klein, senior fellow in economic studies at The Brookings Institute, and CNBC's Leslie Picker and Hugh Son join 'Power Lunch' to discuss the regional banking crisis, the Federal Reserve's response, and more.
How Fed rates hikes impact consumers
  + stars: | 2023-05-03 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHow Fed rates hikes impact consumersDavid Wessel, senior fellow in Economic Studies at Brookings Institutions, and Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.com, join 'The Exchange' to discuss rising interest rates' impact on consumer loans and the economy.
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