The job market is getting weaker, and the economy feels trapped in limbo. Americans hate it.
If you live in one of the swing states this presidential election season, you're likely seeing ads for Donald Trump and Kamala Harris on television, on streaming services and in the mail.
After another tumultuous weekend in the presidential campaign, Americans are still largely focused on their finances, new surveys show. That could give an edge to Vice President Kamala Harris.
Readership data from leading local news publications in all seven battleground states tells a different story: while political news draws interest, economic issues are grabbing voters’ attention most
The state is among a handful that will decide the presidential contest, and workers have felt increased prices at the grocery store and gas station.
The decision to spend much of Biden’s final months on his economic record reflects a bid to finally solve the paradox that’s long challenged the White House and undercut the president’s popularity: The working-class voters Biden crafted his agenda to help the most have been among the hardest to convince of its benefits.
Inflation hit a three-year low last month, just as the presidential election is heating up. But the high cost of housing and other necessities will keep the economy central to both of the major campaigns,
This is an audio transcript of the Economics Show with Soumaya Keynes podcast episode: ‘Is this a winning US economy for the Democrats? With Jared Bernstein’ Soumaya Keynes With the US election looming,
Jerome Powell is unlikely to weigh in on baseless charges of Haitian immigrant pet eating this week but the Fed chair has already weighed in on the town at the center of it all: Springfield, Ohio.