As U.S. exports were reported at an all-time high, California's ports stayed busy. Analysts see a possible dip ahead if Europe's economy freezes up.
As U.S. exports were reported at an all-time high, California's ports stayed busy. Analysts see a possible dip ahead if Europe's economy freezes up.
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CEPR | CPI Rises 0.2 Percent
June 15, 2011
June 15, 2011 - The Consumer Price Index rose 0.2 percent in May—the slowest rate since November—as energy prices fell for the first time since June. The core...
David Ignatius: America's plentiful future
May 06, 2012
| indystar.com
To complete this rosy picture, the analysts forecast that in about five years, U.S. exports will increase by at least $65 billion annually. Hold on, Dr. Pangloss. Those are...
Read the President's State of the Union speech
January 24, 2012
| indystar.com
Two years ago, I set a goal of doubling U.S. exports over five years. With the bipartisan trade agreements I signed into law, we are on track to meet that goal - ahead of...
George Will: High- flying corporate welfare
March 18, 2012
| indystar.com
The bank, whose current reauthorization expires May 31, and which two months before that might hit the $100 billion cap on its loan exposure, subsidizes myriad export transactions with guaranteed loans to make U.S. exports...
Briefly Around the State + Nation
March 30, 2012
| indystar.com
Businesses have been restocking shelves more slowly and shipping fewer long-lasting manufactured goods, while Europe's debt crisis and weaker Asian growth have slowed demand for U.S. exports...
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