2005 USA: $13094 billion, China: $2277 billion, Japan: $4572 billion 2010 USA: $14964 billion, China: $5943 billion, Japan: $5495 billion 2020 USA: $21430 billion, China: $14720 billion, Japan: $5080 billion Past GDP Comparison of USA, China, Japan GDP from 1990 to 2020 in billio...
The pie chart for each office shows “the percentage of cases attributed to specific Mexican cartels in an individual DEA office area of responsibility”.“Since 2014, the Arellano-Felix Organization, LCT, and the Michoacán Family (La Familia Michoacán LFM) cartels have been severely disrupted, ...
First, the above “good news” ignores a US debt/GDP ratio of 125%, a deficits/GDP ratio of 8% and government spending at 25% of GDP. Secondly, US Government Outlays (i.e., deficit spending) has been growing at 30% for five of the last seven months. Spending rates like this have...
By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com Renowned geopolitical and financial cycle expert Charles Nenner has been warning his war cycles are going up. Nenner also predicted a few years back that, at some point, the U.S. dollar cycle would be headed down—way do
So, what can you count on? Look at the chart on “core” inflation from economist John Williams ofShadowstats.comput out last Friday. Forget about the ridiculous idea from the government of tracking inflation by excluding food and energy, and just look at the direction. The flight path is ...
If China matched the improved GDP growth then per capita GDP would be about $24800 in 2022. IMF把对2017年中国GDP增长率的预估上调到6.7%,把2018-2020年平均增长率上调至6.4%。IMF此前对中国2017年GDP增长的预估为6. 分享5014 美国留学吧 百校谢老师 美国留学面签培训内容: 首先要看面前的这个人是不...
That would be the ratio of M2 money to nominal GDP. The M2 “money” has to be held by somebody. IMO it’s not entirely obvious why “people” have been trending toward wanting to hold relatively LARGER balances of M2 money relative to the size of nominal GDP. If money is becoming ...
we know the GDP is overstated. . . . They just reduced payroll employment . . . They overestimated payroll growth by 501,000. This eliminates 20% of the employment growth you have seen in the last year. . . . This also will be reflected in the GDP, and it will continue to get wea...