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The GOP, under presidential candidate Donald Trump, could seek to extend the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. In the abstract, one can argue that tax cuts and deregulation are good for business. However, further unfunded tax cuts would add to the nation's deficits and debt. He has also pushed for raising the corporate tax rate to 28%. Currently, that rate is at 20%, plus a 3.8% net investment income tax for high earners.
Persons: we've, Donald Trump, Trump, Biden, Eisenhower, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden Organizations: GOP, Wall, United, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Observers, White, Trump, Biden, Federal Reserve Locations: Washington ,, United States, U.S, America
Altogether, 6.8 million people are out of a job, which means millions are currently looking for their next role. If you're job searching yourself, remember that sending out resumes is only part of the equation. Networking is "one of the most pivotal things you can do," says Jasmine Escalera, career expert at My Perfect Resume. That's because asking people in the field questions one-on-one "helps you understand, what are industry trends that I should be focused on?" It helps you understand, "how do I best market myself to be the individual who can do this job?"
Persons: Jasmine Escalera, you'll Organizations: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read previewImmigration isn't taking jobs away from Americans — and it's actually great for the US economy, according to Nobel laureate Paul Krugman. The unemployment rate among native-born workers remains near a historical low US Bureau of Labor Statistics/Federal ReserveThe labor force participation rate among native-born workers has been on the decline, but among prime-age native-born workers, the labor force participation rate has actually been rising, Fed data shows. Advertisement"So the near stagnation of native-born employment isn't a demand-side issue, in which people aren't working because they can't find jobs. If we didn't have the immigrants, we wouldn't have the jobs," Krugman wrote. AdvertisementOther economists and strategists on Wall Street have said immigration could end up being a big boost to the economy.
Persons: , it's, Paul Krugman, Trump, Krugman, they've, We've, There's, aren't Organizations: Service, The New York Times, Business, Federal Reserve, Bureau of Labor Statistics, US, of Labor Statistics, Fed, Congressional, Office Locations: America, Foreign
Read previewAmerican consumers have been frustrated by high prices over past years, but there's some good news: wages have outpaced inflation since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Since 2020, average hourly wages for most US workers have risen faster than the consumer price index, meaning income has maintained its purchasing power against rising prices. While wage gains have outpaced inflation, it can be difficult for consumers to feel the growth, and plenty of people still miss the "good old days" of lower prices. Since spring 2023, year-over-year wage growth for production and nonsupervisory workers has consistently been above inflation. While US consumers adjust to higher prices, strong wage growth should help ease affordability concerns, Krugman wrote.
Persons: , Sarah Foster, Foster, Paul Krugman, Krugman Organizations: Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Business, Michigan Ross, Economic Policy Institute, Federal Reserve, New York Times Locations: jtowfighi@businessinsider.com
He's even expanded his job search to restaurant and retail jobs — e.g. AdvertisementHesmondhalgh shared why he thinks his job search has been so challenging and what he plans to do moving forward. AdvertisementIdeally, he'd land a job in journalism — the field he has two degrees in. He thinks he's struggled to land journalism roles because most of the positions he's looked at require three to five years of formal newsroom experience, and he doesn't have that. Going forward, Hesmondhalgh said he plans to continue his job search for as long as necessary.
Persons: , Roland Hesmondhalgh, He's, Hesmondhalgh, hasn't, he's, it's, he'll Organizations: Service, Florida Institute of Technology, Business, Georgetown, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Supreme, US Capitol Locations: Virginia, Washington, DC, Arlington , Virginia
39% of Americans worry they can’t pay the bills
  + stars: | 2024-07-23 | by ( Matt Egan | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
New York CNN —Many Americans regularly worry they won’t be able to make ends meet. Even higher percentages of Latino (52%) and Black (46%) Americans said they’re worried most or all of the time about making ends meet, according to the poll. More than half (55%) of those making less than $50,000 a year similarly worry about having enough money to meet expenses. Even higher percentages of Latinos (52%), Black Americans (44%) and those under the age of 45 (47%) say they’ve taken extra work. Others say they’ve cut back on driving (41%) and they are taking on credit card debt to afford necessities (37%).
Persons: they’re, it’s, , Angela Russell, Russell, – they’re, Greg McBride, they’ve, McBride, who’ve, “ I’ve, Joe Biden, CNN’s Ariel Edwards, Levy, Dana Elobaid Organizations: New, New York CNN, CNN, Centers for Disease Control, Prevention, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bankrate, Ohio, Walmart, SSRS Locations: New York, Ohio, Cincinnati
The US economy added 206,000 jobs in June, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported July 5, a small dip from May’s tally of 215,000 jobs. Inflation rates are nowhere near the pandemic-era peak reached in June 2022, when US inflation hit 9.1%, its highest annual rate in more than 40 years. As of last month, annual inflation was 3%, down from 3.3% in May, according to the Consumer Price Index. But the legislation comes as some manufacturing jobs have also been cut due to outsourcing. Manufacturing jobs across the country have plateaued at 13 million employees after recovering from a sharp pandemic-related downswing in 2020, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Persons: Joe Biden, , Biden, Jobs, aren’t Organizations: New, New York CNN, Democratic, of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, Fed, Consumer, Index, “ Companies, White House, Bureau of Labor Statistics Locations: New York, America, United States, China, Arizona , Colorado , New Mexico , Oregon, Texas
Like other consumer rates, mortgage rates are impacted in large part by what's going on in the economy. This allowed mortgage rates to drop as low as they did, with 30-year mortgage rates reaching an all-time low of 2.65% in January 2021, according to Freddie Mac. Because mortgage rates are still so high, some hopeful homebuyers have decided to wait for lower rates to start shopping for homes. Mortgage rates in 2024: FAQsWill mortgage rates go down in 2024? All consumer interest rates, including mortgage rates, should start to ease as soon as inflation slows further.
Persons: Homebuyers, homebuyers, what's, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Lawrence Yun, that's Organizations: Fed, Bureau of Labor Statistics, NAR, National Association of Realtors, CNBC, Federal Housing Finance Agency, Veterans United, Loans, Federal Reserve, Mortgage, Association Locations: Chevron
The idea is to have a streamlined closet with a limited number of basic clothing items you can mix and match. She says neglecting her personal style was one of the biggest mistakes she made while filling out her capsule wardrobe. "If you buy a piece of clothing that you don't wear often, that's a waste of money," she says. But regardless how much you spend, if it's not something you are going to wear, it's going to be a waste of money. Here are three tips to help you figure out your personal style and stop overspending on clothes.
Persons: Michela Allocca, Derek Guy, it's Organizations: of Labor Statistics, CNBC
They've used the extra income to pay off student debt, save for retirement, and afford expensive vacations and weight-loss drugs. Related storiesIn addition to exploring other income streams, Adam said he's trying to take advantage of his extra income while he still can. The best advice he has for anyone who's still overemployed is not to become too dependent on the extra income. "From the start, I made it a point not to integrate the second job income into our bills," he said. Are you secretly working multiple remote jobs at the same time and willing to discuss details about your pay and schedule?
Persons: , Charles, slowdowns, Charles said he's, I've, They've, overemployment, jugglers, they've, Adam, he's, He'd, Tomas, Charles couldn't, he'd, I'd, Joseph, — Joseph, Luke, who's Organizations: Service, Business, LinkedIn, Bureau, Labor Locations: an Arizona, Georgia, Texas,
How to Rein In Rising Auto Insurance Rates
  + stars: | 2024-07-19 | by ( Ann Carrns | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Even as inflation has eased, car insurance rates are rising by double digits. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, auto insurance costs were 19.5 percent higher in June than a year earlier. Most drivers already know about discounts available for “bundling” auto and homeowner insurance policies with the same carrier or for insuring multiple cars. Becoming a better driver may help. Just one accident can mean you’re paying an average of 43 percent more than drivers with clean safety records, according to the financial website Bankrate, which analyzed insurance data from Quadrant Information Services.
Organizations: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Information Services
The consumer price index rose 3% year-over-year — it hasn't been below 3% since March 2021. However, eight expense categories had price increases of more than 10% over the last year. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . In June, the consumer price index rose 3% year-over-year, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics — it hasn't been below 3% since March 2021. The expense categories with the biggest year-over-year price declines included smartphones, used cars, and apples — each fell by over 10%.
Persons: Organizations: Service, of Labor Statistics, Business
Last month, more than 5.7 million 16- to 19-year-olds participated in the labor market, Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows, marking the highest teen employment rate in June since 2007. Economists say more teens have been drawn to the workforce because of a hot labor market with more attractive wages. And as long as the economy stays strong, experts aren't expecting a dip in teen employment on the horizon. Economists say the overall direction teen employment takes depends heavily on where the economy is headed. A perfect storm of a tight labor market, rising wages, high education costs and curbed immigration could result in continued higher youth employment, Nestler said.
Persons: Jeff Greenberg, aren't, Brad Hershbein, Hershbein, Young, Matthew Nestler, they're, Nestler Organizations: Universal, Getty, of Labor Statistics, . Upjohn Institute, Employment Research, KPMG, CNBC Locations: Miami Beach , Florida
Read previewIt may not feel like it, but there are a lot of cheap flights to be had this summer — and the influx of low-priced, often money-losing economy seats has airlines scrambling. "The unprofitable capacity is just not sustainable," United Airlines' chief commercial officer Andrew Nocella told investors Thursday. Low-cost airlines are bearing the brunt of the painDelta CEO Ed Bastian also questioned the long-term financial viability of the business strategy of low-cost carriers during the airline's earnings call last week. Delta CEO Ed Bastian, pictured onstage at CES in 2019, questioned the long-term viability of money-losing low-cost airlines. In addition, Alaska Airlines announced this week that it's retrofitting its Boeing 737 fleet to add 1.3 million first-class and premium economy seats annually.
Persons: , Andrew Nocella, Scott Kirby, LOGAN CYRUS, Kirby, Nocella, CCO, Ed Bastian, Bastian, Steve Marcus Organizations: Service, United Airlines, Business, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Delta, CES, Reuters Southwest Airlines, Frontier, Polaris, Alaska Airlines, Boeing, Alaska Boeing, American Airlines Locations: Boeing's, Carolina, Alaska
8 drinks bartenders never order in the summer
  + stars: | 2024-07-16 | by ( Casey Clark | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +1 min
Business Insider asked bartenders which drinks they would never order in the summer. The bartenders also said to steer clear of drinks with dairy and lots of sugar. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: Organizations: Service, Las, US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Business
So when worldwide events like the Covid-19 pandemic push inflation well above that 2% target, it can be a real shock to consumers. There are a handful of retail categories, dominated by consumer electronics, that buck the trend and are actually cheaper now than they were before the pandemic, based on a CNBC review of CPI categories in June 2024 compared with June 2019. Same price, better valueEven when annual inflation was at its peak, prices for consumer electronics consistently showed signs of deflation. Such hedonic adjustments — the term BLS uses to describe it's adjustments for changes in item quality — span the whole consumer price index and include categories from men's underwear to home computers to refrigerators. Why televisions continue to be cheapBut hedonic adjustments can't account for everything when the CPI is registering drops in prices.
Persons: it's, Andrew Csicsila, That's, Csicsila Organizations: U.S . Federal Reserve, U.S . Bureau of Labor Statistics, CNBC, CPI, Bureau of Labor Statistics Locations: Americas
You don't need a bachelor's degree or a stacked resume to land a six-figure job. "Businesses always need project managers, not just in tech but also in retail, marketing and a dozen other industries," says Lydia Logan, IBM's vice president of global education and workforce development. "It's a core role that touches on so many different functions within a business: project managers can work with the finance, tech, legal departments, you name it." Businesses across all industries are recruiting project managers to keep up with the rapid advancement of different technologies and adapt to lingering disruptions from the pandemic, Logan adds. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that the number of project management jobs will grow 6% in the next decade — faster than the average for occupations overall.
Persons: , that's, Lydia Logan, Logan Organizations: IBM, Project Management, Labor Statistics
As long as inflation continues to slow, mortgage rates should ease throughout the remainder of 2024, improving affordability for hopeful homebuyers. See more mortgage rates on Zillow Real Estate on ZillowMortgage CalculatorUse our free mortgage calculator to see how today's mortgage rates would impact your monthly payments. 15-Year Fixed Mortgage Rates Go Down (-0.41%)The average 15-year mortgage rate is 5.66%, 41 basis points lower than last week. Mortgage Refinance Rates30-Year Fixed Refinance Rates Decrease (-0.39%)The average 30-year refinance rate is 7.45%, 39 basis points down from last week. Mortgage rates also rose dramatically in 2023, though they started trending back down toward the end of the year.
Persons: you'll, It's, refinance Organizations: Federal, of Labor Statistics, Zillow, FHA Locations: Chevron
But don't bet on a soft landing outcome for the US economy as the Fed gets set to cut rates, says famed economist David Rosenberg. AdvertisementRosenberg ResearchRosenberg's downbeat views on the labor market come amid his skepticism about the impressive rallies in major stock-market indexes like the Nasdaq 100 and the S&P 500. Still, as Rosenberg points out, some say the Fed needs to act urgently as the labor market weakens. Waiting too long to lower interest rates to support the economy will only increase the odds of the job market breaking down." Rosenberg has been consistently bearish on the US economy in recent months, while the labor market has continued to prove him wrong.
Persons: , David Rosenberg, Rosenberg, Merrill Lynch's, Eli Lilly, Russell, Neil Dutta, Dutta Organizations: Service, Fed, Rosenberg Research, Business, Bureau of Labor Statistics ', Survey, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Macro
A measure of wholesale prices rose more than expected in June as Wall Street assesses when the Federal Reserve will feel comfortable cutting interest rates. The producer price index rose 0.2% last month, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday. The PPI is a gauge of prices that producers can get for their goods and services in the open market. Friday's report comes shortly after the June consumer price index came in cooler than expected on Thursday. The Fed's preferred inflation reading is the personal consumption expenditure price index.
Persons: Dow Jones Organizations: Port, Federal, Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, PPI, Traders Locations: Port of Los Angeles, San Pedro , California
Wall Street’s expectations for a September rate cut rose to roughly 93% on Thursday from 73% the day before, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. “A September rate cut should be a done deal at this point,” wrote Ron Temple, chief market strategist at Lazard, in a Thursday note. Some economists worry that if the Fed doesn’t cut rates by then, cracks could begin to deepen in the labor market. A September rate cut “may not be the magic elixir some investors are seeking,” wrote Brent Schutte, chief investment officer at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management, in a Monday note. On an annual basis, consumer prices are increasing at their slowest pace since June 2023, matching the lowest annual rate since early 2021.
Persons: , Ron Temple, Jerome Powell didn’t, Brent Schutte, Alicia Wallace, , Elisabeth Buchwald, McDonald’s, Read Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Federal Reserve, Lazard, Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management, Bureau of Labor Statistics ’, Taco Bell Locations: New York, Burger
CNN —Wholesale price inflation unexpectedly accelerated in June to its highest rate since March 2023. That’s an unwelcome development for the US economy one day after the government announced that consumer prices declined on a monthly basis for the first time in four years. On a monthly basis, prices rose 0.2% after holding flat in May. Economists had expected that prices would increase 0.1% on a monthly basis and hold steady at 2.2% annually. Prices dropped on a monthly basis for the first time since May 2020, and annual inflation slowed to 3%, its slowest rate since June 2023.
Persons: That’s, Price, ” Clark Bellin, Bellin Organizations: CNN —, of Labor Statistics, PPI, Federal Reserve
Average 30-year mortgage rates fell to 6.89%, down six basis points from the week before, according to Freddie Mac. As inflation slows and the Federal Reserve is able to start lowering the federal funds rate, mortgage rates are expected to trend down. This would remove a significant amount of upward pressure off of mortgage rates, allowing them to finally trend down. See more mortgage rates on Zillow Real Estate on ZillowMortgage CalculatorUse our free mortgage calculator to see how today's mortgage rates will affect your monthly and long-term payments. Now that the Fed has paused hiking rates, mortgage rates have come down a bit.
Persons: Freddie Mac Organizations: of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, Zillow, Fed Locations: May's, Chevron
The pace of inflation is coming down, which continues to point to a lower Social Security cost-of-living adjustment for retirees and other beneficiaries in 2025. The Social Security cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, may be 2.7% next year, according to an estimate from Mary Johnson, an independent Social Security and Medicare policy analyst, based on new government data released on Thursday. In 2024, Social Security beneficiaries received a 3.2% cost-of-living adjustment. To be sure, the estimate for the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment for 2025 is subject to change. The Social Security Administration officially determines the cost-of-living adjustment by comparing the third quarter CPI-W data for that year to the third quarter of the previous year.
Persons: Mary Johnson, , Johnson Organizations: Washington , D.C, Security, Social Security, CPI, Urban, Clerical Workers, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Social, Finance Locations: Washington ,
Wuhan is the largest operational region for Baidu's Apollo Go, one of the largest robotaxi operators in China. CNBC was unable to independently verify the document, which claimed the taxi company had to stop operating four of its 159-car fleet since April due to falling income. Ride-hailing drivers on the riseA surge of new companies and ride-hailing drivers have meanwhile prompted some local governments to restrict the industry. China had more than 7 million registered ride-hailing drivers as of the end of May, according to the Ministry of Transport. In comparison, the U.S. had nearly 400,000 taxi and ride-hailing drivers, shuttle drivers and chauffeurs in 2022, according to the latest available figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Persons: Baidu, robotaxis, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Baidu, Bloomberg, Getty, BEIJING, Weibo, CNBC, Ministry of Transport, Bureau of Labor Statistics Locations: Wuhan, San Francisco, Phoenix , Arizona, Beijing, Guangzhou, robotaxis, China, Wuhan city, Guyuan, Ningxia, Guiyang, That's, U.S
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