All publications by tag «GDP»
2020, April, 17, 14:40:00
CHINA'S ECONOMY UPDOWN
China on Friday reported a contraction of 6.8% in its Q1 GDP, but economic activity improved in March from January-February.
2020, March, 31, 13:20:00
KUWAIT GDP GROWTH 1.5%
Kuwait's nonoil growth strengthened to estimated 3 percent in 2019, propelled by government and consumer spending.
2020, March, 27, 13:20:00
U.S. GDP UP 2.1% ANEW
U.S. real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2019
2020, March, 26, 11:20:00
IMF: GLOBAL GROWTH IS NEGATIVE
“First, the outlook for global growth: for 2020 it is negative—a recession at least as bad as during the global financial crisis or worse. But we expect recovery in 2021. To get there, it is paramount to prioritize containment and strengthen health systems—everywhere. The economic impact is and will be severe, but the faster the virus stops, the quicker and stronger the recovery will be.
2020, March, 6, 11:55:00
AUSTRALIA'S GDP GROWTH 2.0%
Australia's economic growth has recovered gradually in 2019 from the lows in the second half of 2018,
2020, March, 4, 09:10:00
SAUDI ARABIA'S ECONOMY UP
Saudi Arabia's oil sector declined by 3.6 percent in 2019 dragging overall GDP growth to 0.3 percent
2020, March, 4, 09:05:00
AUSTRIA'S GDP GROWTH 1.25%
Expected Austria's GDP to increase around 1¼ percent this year, mainly supported again by domestic demand.
2020, February, 28, 15:00:00
U.S. GDP UP 2.1%
U.S. real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2019
2020, February, 24, 10:10:00
SAUDI'S ECONOMY GROWTH
“GDP growth in Saudi Arabia is projected to see an upturn in 2020,” said Kholifey. “Monetary, fiscal and structural policies in my country are all geared towards an expansion of the private non-oil sector GDP over the medium term,” he said.
2020, February, 24, 10:05:00
COLOMBIA'S GDP UP 3.3%
Despite slower regional and global growth, real GDP grew 3.3 percent in 2019 and is forecast to grow by 3.4 in 2020 led by internal demand. Sustained immigration, remittances, and accommodative monetary and credit conditions are expected to continue supporting private domestic demand, including rising investment. Notwithstanding growth resilience, the labor market remained weak in 2019.