US economy posts strong 1q... (Management in Brief).(gross domestic product)(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)

From: Chemical Market Reporter | Date: May 6, 2002 | Copyright information

Real gross domestic product (GDP) in the US increased at an annual rate of 5.6 percent in the first quarter of 2002, according to advance estimates by the Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the fourth quarter, real GDP increased 1.7 percent. The acceleration in real...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Real GDP may see contraction
New Straits Times ; Real GDP may see contraction Edition: 2* REAL gross domestic product for the fourth quarter of last year is expected to see a contraction, said analysts, ahead of Bank Negara Malaysia's release of the figures later today. "We are looking at minus 1.8 per cent in real GDP in the fourth quarter after
What do you expect real GDP growth to be for 2005?(online poll, gross domestic product)(Brief Article)(Illustration)
Industry Week ; What do you expect real GDP growth to be for 2005? Industry Week.com readers respond: Below 2.5% 22% 2.5 To 3% 43% 3. 1 To 3.5% 21% 3. 6 To 4% 10% More Than 4% 3%
FAST STATS.(gross domestic product )(Brief article)
WWD ; The increase in real gross domestic product for fourth-quarter 2007: 0.6 percent The increase in real personal consumption expenditures for fourth-quarter 2007: 1.9 percent Real GDP by state in 2006: Delaware had the highest per capita real GDP of $59,288, while Mississippi had the lowest, $24,062.
US GDP posts marginal gains. (Management in Brief).(gross domestic product)(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)
Chemical Market Reporter ; Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 1.1 percent in the second quarter of 2002, according to preliminary estimates released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the first quarter, real GDP increased 5 percent. The major contributors to the increase in real GDP in the
Growth in the U.S. Gross Domestic Product (Real GDP) sloweddramatically.
Purchasing ; ... figure for quarter two. A prerelease poll by Market News Service had yielded a median estimate of zero percent. Good news is that the first-quarter inventory bulge was largely corrected. Bad news is that the trade deficit grew wider, subtracting ...
The growing mysteries of the GDP. (gross domestic product)(Column)
U.S. News & World Report ; ... compiling real GDP is obviously nutty. So why not change? The good news is that the government already has. In effect, it has begun patching ... relative price changes in the economy every year. Now here's the bad news: Starting in December, the government will present data on real ...
Getting the most from monthly real GDP. (Gross Domestic Product)(Column)
ABA Banking Journal ; Economists use a wide variety of measures both to assess and to forecast general economic conditions. Most of these data are available monthly, and most, with the notable exception of interest rates, are provided with seasonal adjustments. Together, these data give a helpful and, economists
What value is gross domestic product as a macroeconomic indicator of national income, well-being, and environmental stress?(Report)
International Journal of Ecological Economics & Statistics ; Abstract Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is a monetary measure of the goods and services annually produced by domestically located factors of production. The contention expressed in this paper is that GDP--in particular, real GDP--is little more than an indicator of the annual volume of national
NOMINAL GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWS 6.8% DURING 2Q02
Infolatina ; 00-00-0000 Nominal Gross Domestic Product grows 6.8% during 2Q02 MEXICO CITY, Aug 23, 2002 (Notimex/Corporate Mexico by Internet Securities, Inc. via COMTEX) -- The Nominal Gross Domestic Product increased 6.8% during the first half of the year compared to the same period of 2001, reaching 6.14
Trading with new and improved GDP. (gross domestic products) (trading techniques)
Futures (Cedar Falls, Iowa) ; Monthly government releases of one measure of the U.S. economy - gross domestic product - can shake financial markets, but now traders must adapt to a whole new way of stating GDP. Imagine being long bonds when the following words flash across your quote screen: Real gross domestic product