home.social

#inflation — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #inflation, aggregated by home.social.

  1. The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the Labor Department reported on Tuesday, up from a 2.4 percent annual increase before the conflict started in February and a 3.3 percent increase in March.
    #inflation #economics #costofliving #Iran #Israel #corruption #war #macroeconomics #Trumpism
    nytimes.com/2026/05/12/busines

  2. The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the Labor Department reported on Tuesday, up from a 2.4 percent annual increase before the conflict started in February and a 3.3 percent increase in March.
    #inflation #economics #costofliving #Iran #Israel #corruption #war #macroeconomics #Trumpism
    nytimes.com/2026/05/12/busines

  3. The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the Labor Department reported on Tuesday, up from a 2.4 percent annual increase before the conflict started in February and a 3.3 percent increase in March.
    #inflation #economics #costofliving #Iran #Israel #corruption #war #macroeconomics #Trumpism
    nytimes.com/2026/05/12/busines

  4. The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the Labor Department reported on Tuesday, up from a 2.4 percent annual increase before the conflict started in February and a 3.3 percent increase in March.
    #inflation #economics #costofliving #Iran #Israel #corruption #war #macroeconomics #Trumpism
    nytimes.com/2026/05/12/busines

  5. The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the Labor Department reported on Tuesday, up from a 2.4 percent annual increase before the conflict started in February and a 3.3 percent increase in March.
    #inflation #economics #costofliving #Iran #Israel #corruption #war #macroeconomics #Trumpism
    nytimes.com/2026/05/12/busines

  6. Concern about rising prices has reached a fever pitch. A majority of Democrats, Republicans and independents said that they had changed their purchases from grocery stores to stay within budget in the last several months, according to polling from CNN.

    Another 59 percent of Americans said they had cut back on extras and entertainment.
    #inflation #costofliving #Trumpism #economics #microeconomics #income
    nytimes.com/2026/05/23/us/poli

  7. Concern about rising prices has reached a fever pitch. A majority of Democrats, Republicans and independents said that they had changed their purchases from grocery stores to stay within budget in the last several months, according to polling from CNN.

    Another 59 percent of Americans said they had cut back on extras and entertainment.
    #inflation #costofliving #Trumpism #economics #microeconomics #income
    nytimes.com/2026/05/23/us/poli

  8. Concern about rising prices has reached a fever pitch. A majority of Democrats, Republicans and independents said that they had changed their purchases from grocery stores to stay within budget in the last several months, according to polling from CNN.

    Another 59 percent of Americans said they had cut back on extras and entertainment.
    #inflation #costofliving #Trumpism #economics #microeconomics #income
    nytimes.com/2026/05/23/us/poli

  9. Concern about rising prices has reached a fever pitch. A majority of Democrats, Republicans and independents said that they had changed their purchases from grocery stores to stay within budget in the last several months, according to polling from CNN.

    Another 59 percent of Americans said they had cut back on extras and entertainment.
    #inflation #costofliving #Trumpism #economics #microeconomics #income
    nytimes.com/2026/05/23/us/poli

  10. Concern about rising prices has reached a fever pitch. A majority of Democrats, Republicans and independents said that they had changed their purchases from grocery stores to stay within budget in the last several months, according to polling from CNN.

    Another 59 percent of Americans said they had cut back on extras and entertainment.
    #inflation #costofliving #Trumpism #economics #microeconomics #income
    nytimes.com/2026/05/23/us/poli

  11. The overall increase marks the steepest year-over-year rise since May 2023 — when inflation hit a 4 percent pace — and the second consecutive month in which the conflict in the Middle East has measurably pushed prices higher for American consumers. Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.8 percent over the year ending in April, up from 2.6 percent in March.
    #economics #USpolitics #macroeconomics #inflation #policy #costofliving #Trumpism
    washingtonpost.com/business/20

  12. The overall increase marks the steepest year-over-year rise since May 2023 — when inflation hit a 4 percent pace — and the second consecutive month in which the conflict in the Middle East has measurably pushed prices higher for American consumers. Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.8 percent over the year ending in April, up from 2.6 percent in March.
    #economics #USpolitics #macroeconomics #inflation #policy #costofliving #Trumpism
    washingtonpost.com/business/20

  13. The overall increase marks the steepest year-over-year rise since May 2023 — when inflation hit a 4 percent pace — and the second consecutive month in which the conflict in the Middle East has measurably pushed prices higher for American consumers. Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.8 percent over the year ending in April, up from 2.6 percent in March.
    #economics #USpolitics #macroeconomics #inflation #policy #costofliving #Trumpism
    washingtonpost.com/business/20

  14. The overall increase marks the steepest year-over-year rise since May 2023 — when inflation hit a 4 percent pace — and the second consecutive month in which the conflict in the Middle East has measurably pushed prices higher for American consumers. Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.8 percent over the year ending in April, up from 2.6 percent in March.
    #economics #USpolitics #macroeconomics #inflation #policy #costofliving #Trumpism
    washingtonpost.com/business/20

  15. The overall increase marks the steepest year-over-year rise since May 2023 — when inflation hit a 4 percent pace — and the second consecutive month in which the conflict in the Middle East has measurably pushed prices higher for American consumers. Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.8 percent over the year ending in April, up from 2.6 percent in March.
    #economics #USpolitics #macroeconomics #inflation #policy #costofliving #Trumpism
    washingtonpost.com/business/20

  16. Japanese Business Leaders Pledge $3.4 Billion Worth Of Investments For The Philippines

    The Philippines, which is already struggling with weak economic growth, high fuel prices and rapid inflation, got a boost thanks to Japanese business leaders who pledged investments worth $3.4 billion for the country, according to a news report by GMA News.

    To put things in perspective, posted below is an excerpt from the news report of GMA News. Some parts in boldface…

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Wednesday secured stronger commitments for deeper economic integration during a high-level roundtable meeting with top Japanese business executives at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.

    In his meeting with leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions, Marcos bagged an aggregate investment commitment of $3.4 billion (approximately P210 billion) from participating Japanese corporations.

    In a statement, the Presidential Communications Office (PCO) said these combined capital inflows are “projected to catalyze substantive macroeconomic benefits, expanding domestic industrial capacity and directly generating thousands of high-quality, specialized jobs for Filipinos.”

    The PCO added that the infusion “underscores the resilience of the Philippine market, promising long-term economic dividends by fortifying local supply chains, upgrading tourism infrastructure, and accelerating technology transfers across critical growth sectors.”

    The President is in Tokyo for a four-day state visit upon the invitation of the Japanese government.

    In his remarks, Marcos said a robust Philippine-Japan economic corridor is critical and that laying the groundwork for an enhanced, unified partnership is essential to navigate global difficulties, build resilience, and sustain momentum.

    “As we mark 70 years of the normalization of our diplomatic relations, we are no longer simply commemorating history. We are entering a new chapter – a chapter defined not only by friendship, but by deeper integration, shared growth, and a common belief in the future,” the President told the leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions.

    He outlined a unified government approach spearheaded by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Tourism (DOT).

    “The Philippines is pursuing a clear national direction: building an economy where infrastructure, industry, finance, human capital, and connectivity move together as one system of growth,” Marcos said.

    “Increasingly, we recognize that trade and tourism will be among the most important engines of that growth.”

    He underscored the importance of stronger trade and tourism linkages, saying these are not supporting sectors but “core drivers of economic expansion in the Philippines moving forward.”

    “This is a philosophy our two countries understand deeply,” the President said.

    He also acknowledged the foundational contributions of several Japanese firms operating in the Philippines, such as All Nippon Airways, Toyota, Mitsubishi Corporation, Marubeni, Panasonic, and Fast Retailing.

    He thanked these Japanese investors for their continued confidence in the Philippine economy and for helping create high-quality opportunities for Filipino workers and industries.

    You are no longer just investors in our economy. You are builders of it,” Marcos told the Japanese business leaders.

    Let me end this piece by asking you readers: What is your reaction to this development? Do you think the $3.4 billion investment pledge by Japanese corporations will be a huge boost for the Philippines’ economy? Do you consider the ties of Japan and the Philippines healthy today?

    You may answer in the comments below. If you prefer to answer privately, you may do so by sending me a direct message online.

    +++++

    Thank you for reading. If you find this article engaging, please click the like button below, share this article to others and also please consider making a donation to support my publishing. If you are looking for a copywriter to create content for your special project or business, check out my services and my portfolio. Feel free to contact me with a private message. Also please feel free to visit my Facebook page Author Carlo Carrasco and follow me on Twitter at @CarloCarrascoPH as well as on Tumblr at https://carlocarrasco.tumblr.com/ and on Instagram athttps://www.instagram.com/authorcarlocarrasco

    #ASEAN #Asia #AssociationOfSoutheastAsianNationsASEAN #Bing #BongbongMarcos #business #businessNews #CarloCarrasco #ChatGPT #democracy #DepartmentOfTourismDOT #DepartmentOfTradeAndIndustryDTI #diversity #economicDynamism #economicGrowth #economics #economy #EconomyOfThePhilippines #Facebook #finance #foreignInvestors #geek #geopolitics #GMANetwork #GMANews #Google #GoogleSearch #governance #growth #Imperial #Inclusion #inflation #Instagram #Instapundit #Investagrams #investing #investment #investors #Japan #Japanese #jobs #Marcos #money #nationalSecurity #Nippon #Philippines #PresidentMarcos #rapidInflation #SanaeTakaichi #security #socialMedia #TakaichiSanae #WordPress #WordPressCom
  17. Japanese Business Leaders Pledge $3.4 Billion Worth Of Investments For The Philippines

    The Philippines, which is already struggling with weak economic growth, high fuel prices and rapid inflation, got a boost thanks to Japanese business leaders who pledged investments worth $3.4 billion for the country, according to a news report by GMA News.

    To put things in perspective, posted below is an excerpt from the news report of GMA News. Some parts in boldface…

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Wednesday secured stronger commitments for deeper economic integration during a high-level roundtable meeting with top Japanese business executives at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.

    In his meeting with leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions, Marcos bagged an aggregate investment commitment of $3.4 billion (approximately P210 billion) from participating Japanese corporations.

    In a statement, the Presidential Communications Office (PCO) said these combined capital inflows are “projected to catalyze substantive macroeconomic benefits, expanding domestic industrial capacity and directly generating thousands of high-quality, specialized jobs for Filipinos.”

    The PCO added that the infusion “underscores the resilience of the Philippine market, promising long-term economic dividends by fortifying local supply chains, upgrading tourism infrastructure, and accelerating technology transfers across critical growth sectors.”

    The President is in Tokyo for a four-day state visit upon the invitation of the Japanese government.

    In his remarks, Marcos said a robust Philippine-Japan economic corridor is critical and that laying the groundwork for an enhanced, unified partnership is essential to navigate global difficulties, build resilience, and sustain momentum.

    “As we mark 70 years of the normalization of our diplomatic relations, we are no longer simply commemorating history. We are entering a new chapter – a chapter defined not only by friendship, but by deeper integration, shared growth, and a common belief in the future,” the President told the leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions.

    He outlined a unified government approach spearheaded by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Tourism (DOT).

    “The Philippines is pursuing a clear national direction: building an economy where infrastructure, industry, finance, human capital, and connectivity move together as one system of growth,” Marcos said.

    “Increasingly, we recognize that trade and tourism will be among the most important engines of that growth.”

    He underscored the importance of stronger trade and tourism linkages, saying these are not supporting sectors but “core drivers of economic expansion in the Philippines moving forward.”

    “This is a philosophy our two countries understand deeply,” the President said.

    He also acknowledged the foundational contributions of several Japanese firms operating in the Philippines, such as All Nippon Airways, Toyota, Mitsubishi Corporation, Marubeni, Panasonic, and Fast Retailing.

    He thanked these Japanese investors for their continued confidence in the Philippine economy and for helping create high-quality opportunities for Filipino workers and industries.

    You are no longer just investors in our economy. You are builders of it,” Marcos told the Japanese business leaders.

    Let me end this piece by asking you readers: What is your reaction to this development? Do you think the $3.4 billion investment pledge by Japanese corporations will be a huge boost for the Philippines’ economy? Do you consider the ties of Japan and the Philippines healthy today?

    You may answer in the comments below. If you prefer to answer privately, you may do so by sending me a direct message online.

    +++++

    Thank you for reading. If you find this article engaging, please click the like button below, share this article to others and also please consider making a donation to support my publishing. If you are looking for a copywriter to create content for your special project or business, check out my services and my portfolio. Feel free to contact me with a private message. Also please feel free to visit my Facebook page Author Carlo Carrasco and follow me on Twitter at @CarloCarrascoPH as well as on Tumblr at https://carlocarrasco.tumblr.com/ and on Instagram athttps://www.instagram.com/authorcarlocarrasco

    #ASEAN #Asia #AssociationOfSoutheastAsianNationsASEAN #Bing #BongbongMarcos #business #businessNews #CarloCarrasco #ChatGPT #democracy #DepartmentOfTourismDOT #DepartmentOfTradeAndIndustryDTI #diversity #economicDynamism #economicGrowth #economics #economy #EconomyOfThePhilippines #Facebook #finance #foreignInvestors #geek #geopolitics #GMANetwork #GMANews #Google #GoogleSearch #governance #growth #Imperial #Inclusion #inflation #Instagram #Instapundit #Investagrams #investing #investment #investors #Japan #Japanese #jobs #Marcos #money #nationalSecurity #Nippon #Philippines #PresidentMarcos #rapidInflation #SanaeTakaichi #security #socialMedia #TakaichiSanae #WordPress #WordPressCom
  18. Japanese Business Leaders Pledge $3.4 Billion Worth Of Investments For The Philippines

    The Philippines, which is already struggling with weak economic growth, high fuel prices and rapid inflation, got a boost thanks to Japanese business leaders who pledged investments worth $3.4 billion for the country, according to a news report by GMA News.

    To put things in perspective, posted below is an excerpt from the news report of GMA News. Some parts in boldface…

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Wednesday secured stronger commitments for deeper economic integration during a high-level roundtable meeting with top Japanese business executives at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.

    In his meeting with leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions, Marcos bagged an aggregate investment commitment of $3.4 billion (approximately P210 billion) from participating Japanese corporations.

    In a statement, the Presidential Communications Office (PCO) said these combined capital inflows are “projected to catalyze substantive macroeconomic benefits, expanding domestic industrial capacity and directly generating thousands of high-quality, specialized jobs for Filipinos.”

    The PCO added that the infusion “underscores the resilience of the Philippine market, promising long-term economic dividends by fortifying local supply chains, upgrading tourism infrastructure, and accelerating technology transfers across critical growth sectors.”

    The President is in Tokyo for a four-day state visit upon the invitation of the Japanese government.

    In his remarks, Marcos said a robust Philippine-Japan economic corridor is critical and that laying the groundwork for an enhanced, unified partnership is essential to navigate global difficulties, build resilience, and sustain momentum.

    “As we mark 70 years of the normalization of our diplomatic relations, we are no longer simply commemorating history. We are entering a new chapter – a chapter defined not only by friendship, but by deeper integration, shared growth, and a common belief in the future,” the President told the leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions.

    He outlined a unified government approach spearheaded by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Tourism (DOT).

    “The Philippines is pursuing a clear national direction: building an economy where infrastructure, industry, finance, human capital, and connectivity move together as one system of growth,” Marcos said.

    “Increasingly, we recognize that trade and tourism will be among the most important engines of that growth.”

    He underscored the importance of stronger trade and tourism linkages, saying these are not supporting sectors but “core drivers of economic expansion in the Philippines moving forward.”

    “This is a philosophy our two countries understand deeply,” the President said.

    He also acknowledged the foundational contributions of several Japanese firms operating in the Philippines, such as All Nippon Airways, Toyota, Mitsubishi Corporation, Marubeni, Panasonic, and Fast Retailing.

    He thanked these Japanese investors for their continued confidence in the Philippine economy and for helping create high-quality opportunities for Filipino workers and industries.

    You are no longer just investors in our economy. You are builders of it,” Marcos told the Japanese business leaders.

    Let me end this piece by asking you readers: What is your reaction to this development? Do you think the $3.4 billion investment pledge by Japanese corporations will be a huge boost for the Philippines’ economy? Do you consider the ties of Japan and the Philippines healthy today?

    You may answer in the comments below. If you prefer to answer privately, you may do so by sending me a direct message online.

    +++++

    Thank you for reading. If you find this article engaging, please click the like button below, share this article to others and also please consider making a donation to support my publishing. If you are looking for a copywriter to create content for your special project or business, check out my services and my portfolio. Feel free to contact me with a private message. Also please feel free to visit my Facebook page Author Carlo Carrasco and follow me on Twitter at @CarloCarrascoPH as well as on Tumblr at https://carlocarrasco.tumblr.com/ and on Instagram athttps://www.instagram.com/authorcarlocarrasco

    #ASEAN #Asia #AssociationOfSoutheastAsianNationsASEAN #Bing #BongbongMarcos #business #businessNews #CarloCarrasco #ChatGPT #democracy #DepartmentOfTourismDOT #DepartmentOfTradeAndIndustryDTI #diversity #economicDynamism #economicGrowth #economics #economy #EconomyOfThePhilippines #Facebook #finance #foreignInvestors #geek #geopolitics #GMANetwork #GMANews #Google #GoogleSearch #governance #growth #Imperial #Inclusion #inflation #Instagram #Instapundit #Investagrams #investing #investment #investors #Japan #Japanese #jobs #Marcos #money #nationalSecurity #Nippon #Philippines #PresidentMarcos #rapidInflation #SanaeTakaichi #security #socialMedia #TakaichiSanae #WordPress #WordPressCom
  19. Japanese Business Leaders Pledge $3.4 Billion Worth Of Investments For The Philippines

    The Philippines, which is already struggling with weak economic growth, high fuel prices and rapid inflation, got a boost thanks to Japanese business leaders who pledged investments worth $3.4 billion for the country, according to a news report by GMA News.

    To put things in perspective, posted below is an excerpt from the news report of GMA News. Some parts in boldface…

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Wednesday secured stronger commitments for deeper economic integration during a high-level roundtable meeting with top Japanese business executives at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.

    In his meeting with leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions, Marcos bagged an aggregate investment commitment of $3.4 billion (approximately P210 billion) from participating Japanese corporations.

    In a statement, the Presidential Communications Office (PCO) said these combined capital inflows are “projected to catalyze substantive macroeconomic benefits, expanding domestic industrial capacity and directly generating thousands of high-quality, specialized jobs for Filipinos.”

    The PCO added that the infusion “underscores the resilience of the Philippine market, promising long-term economic dividends by fortifying local supply chains, upgrading tourism infrastructure, and accelerating technology transfers across critical growth sectors.”

    The President is in Tokyo for a four-day state visit upon the invitation of the Japanese government.

    In his remarks, Marcos said a robust Philippine-Japan economic corridor is critical and that laying the groundwork for an enhanced, unified partnership is essential to navigate global difficulties, build resilience, and sustain momentum.

    “As we mark 70 years of the normalization of our diplomatic relations, we are no longer simply commemorating history. We are entering a new chapter – a chapter defined not only by friendship, but by deeper integration, shared growth, and a common belief in the future,” the President told the leaders of Japan’s largest conglomerates and financial institutions.

    He outlined a unified government approach spearheaded by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Tourism (DOT).

    “The Philippines is pursuing a clear national direction: building an economy where infrastructure, industry, finance, human capital, and connectivity move together as one system of growth,” Marcos said.

    “Increasingly, we recognize that trade and tourism will be among the most important engines of that growth.”

    He underscored the importance of stronger trade and tourism linkages, saying these are not supporting sectors but “core drivers of economic expansion in the Philippines moving forward.”

    “This is a philosophy our two countries understand deeply,” the President said.

    He also acknowledged the foundational contributions of several Japanese firms operating in the Philippines, such as All Nippon Airways, Toyota, Mitsubishi Corporation, Marubeni, Panasonic, and Fast Retailing.

    He thanked these Japanese investors for their continued confidence in the Philippine economy and for helping create high-quality opportunities for Filipino workers and industries.

    You are no longer just investors in our economy. You are builders of it,” Marcos told the Japanese business leaders.

    Let me end this piece by asking you readers: What is your reaction to this development? Do you think the $3.4 billion investment pledge by Japanese corporations will be a huge boost for the Philippines’ economy? Do you consider the ties of Japan and the Philippines healthy today?

    You may answer in the comments below. If you prefer to answer privately, you may do so by sending me a direct message online.

    +++++

    Thank you for reading. If you find this article engaging, please click the like button below, share this article to others and also please consider making a donation to support my publishing. If you are looking for a copywriter to create content for your special project or business, check out my services and my portfolio. Feel free to contact me with a private message. Also please feel free to visit my Facebook page Author Carlo Carrasco and follow me on Twitter at @CarloCarrascoPH as well as on Tumblr at https://carlocarrasco.tumblr.com/ and on Instagram athttps://www.instagram.com/authorcarlocarrasco

    #ASEAN #Asia #AssociationOfSoutheastAsianNationsASEAN #Bing #BongbongMarcos #business #businessNews #CarloCarrasco #ChatGPT #democracy #DepartmentOfTourismDOT #DepartmentOfTradeAndIndustryDTI #diversity #economicDynamism #economicGrowth #economics #economy #EconomyOfThePhilippines #Facebook #finance #foreignInvestors #geek #geopolitics #GMANetwork #GMANews #Google #GoogleSearch #governance #growth #Imperial #Inclusion #inflation #Instagram #Instapundit #Investagrams #investing #investment #investors #Japan #Japanese #jobs #Marcos #money #nationalSecurity #Nippon #Philippines #PresidentMarcos #rapidInflation #SanaeTakaichi #security #socialMedia #TakaichiSanae #WordPress #WordPressCom
  20. Iran War Lifts a Second Inflation Reading to Highest Level Since 2023

    A measure of inflation closely watched by the Federal Reserve accelerated in April to a three-year high, reinforcing…
    #NewsBeep #News #BreakingNews #BankingandFinancialInstitutions #breakingnews #commercedepartment #FederalReserveSystem #Inflation(Economics) #InterestRates #Iran
    newsbeep.com/562306/

  21. Ultimately, of course, I'm not going into oil trading anytime soon.

    Quite the opposite: gwagner.com/nature-fossilflati

    We're still working on the peer-reviewed manuscript, but it will likely focus on an entirely different layer to this exercise: the incentives for switching to bio-syncrude.

    #climate #fossilfuels #inflation #economics

  22. Ultimately, of course, I'm not going into oil trading anytime soon.

    Quite the opposite: gwagner.com/nature-fossilflati

    We're still working on the peer-reviewed manuscript, but it will likely focus on an entirely different layer to this exercise: the incentives for switching to bio-syncrude.

    #climate #fossilfuels #inflation #economics

  23. Ultimately, of course, I'm not going into oil trading anytime soon.

    Quite the opposite: gwagner.com/nature-fossilflati

    We're still working on the peer-reviewed manuscript, but it will likely focus on an entirely different layer to this exercise: the incentives for switching to bio-syncrude.

    #climate #fossilfuels #inflation #economics

  24. Ultimately, of course, I'm not going into oil trading anytime soon.

    Quite the opposite: gwagner.com/nature-fossilflati

    We're still working on the peer-reviewed manuscript, but it will likely focus on an entirely different layer to this exercise: the incentives for switching to bio-syncrude.

    #climate #fossilfuels #inflation #economics

  25. Ultimately, of course, I'm not going into oil trading anytime soon.

    Quite the opposite: gwagner.com/nature-fossilflati

    We're still working on the peer-reviewed manuscript, but it will likely focus on an entirely different layer to this exercise: the incentives for switching to bio-syncrude.

    #climate #fossilfuels #inflation #economics

  26. Both PCE and PCE core show increasing , where everything is being driven by the and PCE energy seeing the largest spike (18.3%) since post-COVID 2022 inflation surge.

  27. #ICYMI
    #JimmyKimmel's monologue was excellent last night.

    #DonJongUn had another one of his #BSC 🦇💩😜 cabinet meetings where everyone told the #NarcissistInChief what a fantastic job he's doing (most bizarre of all, telling him he's Making the #economy Great Again despite soaring #inflation & gas prices.)

    It's no wonder he thinks every election is stolen & every negative news story's #FakeNews. He lives in a bubble surrounded by sycophants who shield him from the truth.
    youtube.com/watch?v=g_MBX1Mu4EQ

  28. South Korea holds rates, reveals hawkish split within board

    Pedestrians crossing a road in front of the Bank of Korea headquarters in Seoul on July 13, 2022.…
    #Economy #@LCO26N #AsiaEconomy #BreakingNews:Economy #BreakingNews:Markets #businessnews #centralbank #Centralbanking #CentralBanks #Inflation #interestrates #KOSPIIndex #markets #prices #seoul #southkorea #USDollar/KoreanWonFXSpotRate #worldeconomy #WorldMarkets
    europesays.com/3022229/

  29. Food Prices Set for Summer Surge as Trump and GOP Stare Down Inflation ‘Abyss’

    US shoppers have been struggling with the price of groceries for years now, and prices are only set…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Economy #Affordability #Business #groceries #Inflation #RepublicanParty #SuperElNiño
    newsbeep.com/us/669028/

  30. Food Prices Set for Summer Surge as Trump and GOP Stare Down Inflation ‘Abyss’

    US shoppers have been struggling with the price of groceries for years now, and prices are only set…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Economy #Affordability #Business #groceries #Inflation #RepublicanParty #SuperElNiño
    newsbeep.com/us/669028/

  31. The new world order. No one knows whether it’s even a war or just a special military mission. Whether the war is still going on or has already been won. Ultimately, no one knows who won it in the first place.

    #news #question #won #war #mission #conflict #military #trump #negotiation #diplomacy #iran #usa #america #whitehouse #pentagon #government #politics #trump #president #worldorder #nwo #conspiracy #world #trade #inflation #future #humanity #stability #mad #crazy #idiocracy #security #hormuz #ethics #humanrights

  32. The new world order. No one knows whether it’s even a war or just a special military mission. Whether the war is still going on or has already been won. Ultimately, no one knows who won it in the first place.

    #news #question #won #war #mission #conflict #military #trump #negotiation #diplomacy #iran #usa #america #whitehouse #pentagon #government #politics #trump #president #worldorder #nwo #conspiracy #world #trade #inflation #future #humanity #stability #mad #crazy #idiocracy #security #hormuz #ethics #humanrights

  33. The new world order. No one knows whether it’s even a war or just a special military mission. Whether the war is still going on or has already been won. Ultimately, no one knows who won it in the first place.

    #news #question #won #war #mission #conflict #military #trump #negotiation #diplomacy #iran #usa #america #whitehouse #pentagon #government #politics #trump #president #worldorder #nwo #conspiracy #world #trade #inflation #future #humanity #stability #mad #crazy #idiocracy #security #hormuz #ethics #humanrights