The National Economy at Midyear: A Reader's Guide to the Signals
The indicators rarely move in unison. How to weigh growth, prices, and employment without alarm.
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The American IntelligencerVol. CCXXV - No. 189 - - Washington, D.C.
Growth, prices, and employment rarely move in unison. A plain guide to the indicators that describe the nation's ledger, and how to weigh them without alarm.
Every month, and again every quarter, a fresh batch of figures pours out of the capital and the nation's statistical agencies: output, prices, payrolls, sentiment. Read in isolation, any single one of them can frighten or console. Read together, and with patience, they describe something steadier than the headlines suggest: an economy that is always several things at once.
The trouble is that the numbers rarely move in unison, and a single month seldom means what it first appears to mean. What follows is a plain guide to the signals that matter, how they fit together, and how to weigh them without alarm.
Continue readingThe indicators rarely move in unison. How to weigh growth, prices, and employment without alarm.
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