With less than a month to go before the U.S. elections, the American economy is in arguably in the best shape it has been prior to any presidential contest in recent history. Unemployment is at a more than two decade low.
Vice President Harris is releasing a new ad targeting Latinos in battleground states, focusing on her cost-of-living proposals. “Hard Work” will air in all battlegrounds with state-specific intros as part of the campaign’s $370 million investment in TV and digital ads in the final weeks of the campaign.
Most voters likely don’t even follow the overall economic trends, let alone one month’s data, he said. Instead, their views on the economy are shaped by how far their dollars are stretching today compared to recent times. That track record isn’t great nowadays.
Harris says her proposals would help low- and middle-income workers. Trump says he would expand tax cuts, impose tariffs.
Corey Lewandowski, a Trump campaign senior adviser, discusses how people would be able to measure an improved economy if former President Donald Trump is elected. Lewandowski says Trump would like to talk more about policy,
More Americans think the economy would fare better under former President Trump than Vice President Harris in a new survey, even as many economists say they expect higher inflation and slower
Vice President Kamala Harris has hit the campaign trail with ambitious plans to boost small businesses, but does her record match the rhetoric from her presidential campaign?
The outlook for inflation and growth in the US would be roughly the same whether Kamala Harris or Donald Trump wins the election, though economists in a Bloomberg survey give the vice president the edge on the economy overall.
Vice President Harris has “so far declined” an invitation to talk about her economic agenda with the Economic Club of Chicago and Bloomberg News, one of the outlet’s editors said
Small business owners are growing more uncertain about the economy ahead of the presidential election and are reining in spending, according to a new survey.
Their warning builds on the insights of Milton Friedman, the famous free-market economist who “believed the limitations on government concentration of economic power, adherence to the rule of law, respect for property rights and enforcement of contracts, was central to the prosperity of the free world.”