Economy News

The Daily Signal reports on economy news with analysis and commentary on growth, recession risks, employment, and financial trends.
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    • Opinion

    Preventing America’s Looming Fiscal Crisis With a Balanced Budget Amendment

    Nearly everyone in America understands what it means—and what is required—to live within a budget. Regardless of zip code or economic status, most people can spend only as much as they earn. One person’s paycheck may be twice the size as his neighbor’s, but neither may continually spend beyond their means. The one glaring exception…
    Sen. Mike Lee
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    • Opinion

    Gimmicks Are Preventing Congress From Honestly Balancing the Budget

    This week the House Budget Committee presented its budget proposal for fiscal year 2017 to the American people. The proposal spends too much, cuts too little, and is riddled with gimmicks that thwart the goal of honestly balancing the budget. This is not what a conservative budget looks like. This budget’s primary relevance is how much…
    Romina Boccia
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    • Opinion

    Minimum Wage Hike in DC Will Stifle Job Creation

    Last summer, the District of Columbia increased its minimum wage to $10.50 an hour, which is currently the highest for any U.S. state or territory. This July, the District’s minimum wage will rise again to $11.50 an hour. Then, on Nov. 8, 2016 D.C. voters may consider an initiative to increase the minimum wage to…
    James Sherk
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    • News

    With Release of Budget Plan, House Conservatives Push For Steeper Cuts

    As the House Budget Committee approved a $1.07 trillion budget plan on Wednesday night, a leading conservative group was set to propose its own fiscal blueprint that spends less money, in the hope it would inspire the Republican conference to move in the same direction. The Republican Study Committee’s budget, which will officially be unveiled…
    Josh Siegel
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    • Opinion

    Why Ireland’s Economy Grew by 8% in 2015

    March 17 is St. Patrick’s Day, when all things Irish get celebrated. Before we make another toast with a pint of smooth Guinness or whatever drinks you prefer, it’s worth taking a look at the state of the Irish economy to see how impressively the Celtic Tiger has made its roaring comeback. According to the…
    Anthony B. Kim
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    • Opinion

    House Budget Goes in the Wrong Direction on Defense

    The newly released House budget proposal would increase defense spending in future years, but for the 2017 fiscal year it goes in the wrong direction. First, the good: In the 2018 fiscal year and beyond, the budget proposal would increase defense above current levels (although still below the Heritage Blueprint for Balance). Congress must increase…
    Justin Johnson
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    • News

    Leadership Releases New Budget as Conservatives Gear Up Opposition to Spending Levels

    Conservatives in the House of Representatives remain unsatisfied with the budget blueprint produced by Republican leadership. Now their vocal dissatisfaction places both the future of that document and the entire budget process in question for 2016. Monday night, the House Freedom Caucus, a group of conservative lawmakers, announced its official opposition to any proposal that…
    Philip Wegmann
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    • Opinion

    Republicans Are Addicted to Increasing Federal Spending

    Three out of every four Americans say Congress should not increase spending. That’s not 73 percent of the Tea Party, or 73 percent of the Republican Party. That’s 73 percent of all Americans who say Congress should not increase federal spending. Republicans seem to have missed that message. Since 2013, the GOP has consistently proposed…
    Tommy Binion
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    • Opinion

    How to Slash Spending Growth Rate From Projected 5% to 2%

    Over the next decade, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) expects total spending (outlays) to rise by almost 5 percent annually, with spending totaling nearly $51.4 trillion over the entire period. At this rate, spending growth would significantly outpace revenue growth, resulting in more than $9 trillion in cumulative deficits, which would drive debt to devastating…
    Justin Bogie
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    • Opinion

    Self-Sufficiency, Not Government Spending, Should Be the Measure of Antipoverty Progress

    This week President Barack Obama’s Department of Health and Human Services reached the startling conclusion that if massive welfare programs such as food stamps and the refundable earned income credit are counted as income, poverty is reduced. Not even incompetent government bureaucracies can spend a trillion dollars per year and have no effect on living…
    Robert Rector
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    • Opinion

    Venezuelans Fighting for Economic Freedom

    A broad coalition of anti-government parties in Venezuela announced a plan this month to oust President Nicolás Maduro. The plan includes constitutionally legal mechanisms to shorten the president’s term, a recall referendum, and public protests demanding Maduro’s resignation. Hand-picked by Hugo Chávez, Maduro is now the face of executive branch corruption in Venezuela. Now recent…
    Tori K. Smith
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    • Opinion

    Justin Fever Puts Canada’s Economic Freedom at Risk

    Justin Trudeau, Canada’s new prime minister, is currently visiting Washington to deepen ties with President Barack Obama and make headway on an ambitious left-leaning agenda on a wider range of issues. From an economics perspective, the summit is basically like Trudeaunomics-meets-Obamanomics, which can double the risk of undermining Canada’s economic freedom and dynamism. Under the…
    Anthony B. Kim
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    • Opinion

    Kanye West Isn’t the Only One With a Spending Problem

    If Kanye West’s personal finances have you worried, take a closer look at the federal budget. When West announced in February that he was $53 million in personal debt, he took to Twitter to ask for help from his followers, specifically soliciting $1 billion from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. Unfortunately, the federal government seems to…
    Mollie McNeill
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    • Opinion

    House Budget Proposal Falls Short on Defense

    House Republicans are trying to develop a budget that both is fiscally responsible and increases defense spending. Unfortunately, the latest proposal underfunds defense and overfunds wasteful domestic programs, and House Republicans are headed for a political buzz saw if they shortchange current military operations to pay for defense increases elsewhere. This gimmick will distract from vital policy…
    Justin Johnson
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    • Opinion

    The Left’s Fuel Economy Regulations Could Cost You $3,800

    As Michigan voters head to the polls on Tuesday, they should ask candidates whether they will leave in place costly regulations that have added thousands to the price of new cars and depressed sales for the state’s iconic industry. Federal regulations that force ever-increasing automobile fuel economy standards cost consumers thousands of dollars more than…
    David Kreutzer
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    • Opinion

    Long-Term Unemployment Remains High Despite Strong February Job Gains

    The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ February jobs report showed continued growth in the labor market. The payroll survey reported that employers added 242,000 net new jobs last month. The payroll survey showed unemployment remaining unchanged at 4.9 percent. Even more encouragingly, unemployment stayed flat despite over half a million (+555,000) new workers entering the labor…
    James Sherk
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    • News

    House GOP Leaders Argue Against Scrapping Budget Deal

    For House Republicans, the time for choosing starts Thursday. At a GOP conference meeting, leadership plans to gauge support for adopting a new budget with old spending numbers that conservatives, among others, consider too high. House Budget Chairman Tom Price, R-Ga., is set to preview his committee’s budget resolution for Republican lawmakers. How lawmakers receive the…
    Philip Wegmann
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    • Opinion

    How Oregon’s $14.50 Minimum Wage Will Hurt Those It’s Supposed to Help

    Good intentions can produce terrible results. Recently the Oregon legislature passed an unprecedented minimum wage hike in effort to help workers within their state, but the legislation will hurt the workers it’s supposed to help. By 2022, the state’s minimum wage will rise to $14.50/hour in the Portland area, $12.50/hour in rural areas, and $13.25/hour…
    James Sherk
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    • Opinion

    The Minimum Wage Killed 1 out of 11 Jobs on This Tropical Island

    Congress is considering potential responses to Puerto Rico’s depression and fiscal crisis. Fiscal conservatives are considering whether outside oversight by a “control board” would force feckless local legislators to make difficult choices, such as consolidating rural schools and laying off bureaucrats. However, if Congress gives the board authority only to cut government spending and raise…
    Salim Furth
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    • News

    Lawmakers: Obama Administration Illegally Diverted Billions Intended for US Treasury to Insurers

    Republicans on Capitol Hill are questioning the legality of a move by the Obama administration to give billions to insurers under a program implemented under Obamacare that they say is equal to an insurer bailout. At issue for lawmakers on the House Energy and Commerce Committee is whether the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services…
    Melissa Quinn
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