Economic concerns motivated many voters to go to the polls in 2024, but they were even bigger priorities for young Americans who did not vote, according to a new poll conducted by the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) at Tufts University's Jonathan M.
Presidential elections are a big deal. They reinforce the policies of the current administration or bring in a completely different management team.
Donald Trump's return to the White House has darkened the mood in Germany a month before elections, as multiple crises shake the foundations on which Europe's biggest economy built its post-war prosperity.
Before the election, we asked JD Vance what could be done to improve the economy and bring down inflation. Here’s what he told us.
The German economy has shrunk for two years in a row, will stagnate in 2025, and hardly grow thereafter. Faced with deep-seated structural challenges, Europe’s powerhouse is in an economic existential crisis.
Donald Trump will shortly be sworn in as the 47th president of the U.S., and financial markets are pivoting their focus to the anticipated policies.
An early payoff has already been scored by TikTok, the video-sharing app that spent months currying favor with the then-candidate Trump in hopes that if he won the election, he would help it survive a threatened shutdown.
Rebecca Jones asks economist James McIntyre from Bloomberg Economics, what this all means for Australia in the year ahead. Rebecca Jones is the managing editor of Bloomberg News for Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Islands.
While the interim government’s intention to tackle political and economic challenges is commendable, the task appears daunting.
U.S. stock indexes are rallying toward the close of their best week in two months. The S&P 500 rose 1.1% Friday.
The German economy shrank for the second straight year in 2024 as worried consumers held back on spending and Chinese competition ate into the country’s traditional exports of cars and industrial machinery.
The uncomfortable truth for the chancellor and her party is, five months after their election victory, the economy was the same size as it was in July.