News

Bureau of Labor Statistics faces scrutiny over data collection methods following disappointing July jobs report that missed economist estimates by 37,000 positions.
The president attempted to tell a different story about the U.S. economy than what the latest job report revealed.
Global shares advanced Monday after Wall Street had its worst day since May following the release of weak U.S. jobs data and ...
Amid concerns about the stability of the agency, records show nearly 40% of the doctors offered jobs at the VA from January ...
After six months of haranguing the Federal Reserve to slash the federal funds rate despite a persistently strong economy, ...
A data report on job statistics has left president Donald Trump furious, with a moment of 'madness' captured in the White House as he presented a graph to reporters which goes 'beyond parody' ...
The S&P 500 rose 0.8% in early trading to claw back roughly half of Friday’s drop. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up ...
Trump’s reaction to July’s jobs report created a whole new controversy. Can Congress’ new normal be disrupted? Plus, KCRW ...
"The mindset of the market is to embrace risk because that brings rewards rather than losses -- keep shrugging it off," Steve ...
The recent revisions downward were unusually large, but there are many factors that require updating numbers, and rigging the data would be difficult.
President Trump and economist Stephen Moore held a surprise briefing in the Oval Office on Thursday, challenging the ...
Last Friday, Donald Trump followed up a concerning jobs report with massive new global tariffs, driving markets down and once ...