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Obama adviser Alan Krueger talks June jobs numbers
Interview by
Jul 6, 2012
The economy added 80,000 non-farm jobs in June and the unemployment rate remained at 8.2 percent. Alan Krueger, chairman of President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, puts the latest numbers in perspective.
June unemployment sticks at 8.2%; 80,000 jobs added
Interview by
Jul 6, 2012
The U.S. Labor Department has released its monthly jobs report. Employers added just 80,000 jobs last month, while unemployment stayed stagnant at 8.2 percent.
Markets down on jobs report, uncertainty
Interview by
Jul 6, 2012
U.S. markets are down slightly this morning on the latest jobs data from the Labor Department which said that just 80,000 jobs were added in the U.S. last month and unemployment remained at 8.2 percent.
June jobs report may be lackluster
by
Jul 6, 2012
Many economists are expecting fewer than 100,000 new jobs created, and unemployment to hold at 8.2% for the month of June.
China and EU stimulus may lift U.S. economy
Interview by
Jul 5, 2012
Today central banks in Europe and China announced new monetary stimulus measures to spur economic growth. How will the global stimulus measures impact the U.S. economy and unemployment?
What to expect from June jobs report
by
Jul 5, 2012
Today's job numbers are good, but economists still think tomorrow's will be mediocre.
Planned job cuts at 13-month low
Interview by
Jul 5, 2012
Ahead of tomorrow's June jobs report, data today shows the number of planned job cuts at U.S. companies has dropped to the lowest level in 13 months.
To a daughter who made her mom proud
by
Jun 29, 2012
A proud mom nominates her daughter, who weathered a year of unemployment, for this week’s Piggy Award.
Can more job training create more jobs?
by
Jun 27, 2012
Re-training the unemployed might just give some job seekers an edge over others.
This economic recovery will be a jobless one
Interview with
Jun 21, 2012
Marketplace's Chris Farrell argues that this recovery is more similar to the jobless recoveries of the 1990s and 2000s than of the 1980s and 1970s, and he talks about what to expect going forward.







