Poll finds rising concern over shutdown impact on economy
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A new Rutgers-Eagleton poll shows most New Jerseyans view the economy negatively and struggle with rising costs, underscoring the stakes in a governor’s race focused on affordability and economic anxiety.
More than 7 in 10 Americans say current economic conditions in the country are "poor" or "very poor in a new CNN/SSRS poll.
Credit loan data aligns with what some economists are calling a K-shaped economy, one where higher-income earners are spending as they usually would on discretionary purchases like travel and premium goods, while lower-income earners cut back on dining out or trading down on purchases at the grocery store.
The Institute of Directors (IoD) has launched its fourth business economy survey and will share the responses with the States. The IoD said the questions would focus on business confidence, the issues facing organisations and potential solutions to the island's fiscal deficit.
U.S. economists may be barely holding on by their fingernails over the current state of the American economy, but strangely, consumers don’t seem to care. Here’s why.
In today’s newsletter: The shutdown is intensifying anxiety over the economy, and some Republicans are sounding the alarm. Gubernatorial hopefuls in New Jersey and Virginia make their final push ahead of Election Day. And the Trump administration is planning a new mission against Mexican cartels, U.S. officials say.
Political strategist Mark Penn said Monday on Fox Business that President Donald Trump can turn around his poor economic polling if he “sells the facts” to the public. A majority of Americans now rate the economy negatively,
A sweeping new survey of 3,000 registered Latino voters across the country finds that economic anxiety continues to dominate the political mood heading into the 2026 midterm elections, with cost of living,
"Seeing the videos and the photographs is one thing, but actually being there in person and seeing the damage is quite another," Jamaican Sen. Abka Fitz-Henley said. "It's heartbreaking."
China's President Xi Jinping on Tuesday sought to expand mutual investment with Russia and affirmed Beijing's commitment to advance ties despite "turbulent" external conditions, Chinese state media reported.