Sentences with phrase «q3 gdp growth»

The second estimate of Q3 GDP growth is moderately higher than the initial, or «advance», estimate.
This comes on top of Q2 and Q3 GDP growth of 3.1 % and 3.2 %, respectively.

Not exact matches

While Las Vegas» 2016 GDP growth rate of 3.9 % was the seventh - highest among the 40 largest metro areas, the region's Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 898 was the fifth - lowest.
The largest overestimate of real GDP growth occurred for Q3: 2007, where the January 2008 estimate was 219 basis points above the current estimate.
San Jose held the top position among the 40 largest metro areas in three of our five metrics: Its Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 2,297, 2016 GDP growth rate of 5.9 %, and 2016 GDP per capita of $ 126,820 were all best among the nation's big cities.
Atlanta's Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 1,067 was right in line with the average among the 40 largest metro areas of $ 1,095, and the region's 2016 GDP growth rate of 3.7 % was the eighth - highest.
Houston was one of just two of the 40 largest metro areas to experience a decrease in economic activity in 2016, with a GDP growth rate of -3.0 %, but its Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 1,187 was the seventh - best.
San Francisco's Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 1,654, its February 2018 unemployment rate of 2.9 %, its 2016 GDP growth rate of 5.4 %, and its 2016 GDP per capita of $ 100,132 were all the second - best among the 40 largest metro areas.
Mind you, that January 2008 estimate of Q3: 2007 real GDP growth was already the third revision of the October 2007 first guess by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of Q3: 2007 real GDP growth.
In contrast to the 3 % GDP growth widely reported for the latest quarter, year - over-year growth in GDP, after peaking at 3 1/2 % in Q3 / 2010, has basically flatlined around 1 1/2 % for the last three quarters.
There is the highest likelihood that the US economy will start a recession in Q2 / Q3 2006 and it will be «official» 2 negative GDP growth quarters sometime H1 2007.
In Q4 2017, overall GDP growth reached 1.92 % up from 1.4 % in Q3 and 0.72 % in Q2 - the trajectory is clearly positive, a clear departure from the 2016 trajectory which at a point appeared to look like the country was descending rapidly into depression!
The GDP data is unambiguous that our recovery is almost entirely due to the oil sector - in Q2 2017, when we exited recession, oil sector growth was 3.5 % while the non-oil economy grew a puny 0.45 %; in Q3 the non-oil economy went back into contraction with negative -0.76 % growth, but the overall economy was lifted by oil sector growth of 25.89 %; and in Q4 the oil sector grew by 8.38 %, while non-oil expanded by 1.45 %.
Due in part to our concern that after an inventory - fueled 3.6 % SAAR Q3 GDP, the U.S. economy is going to slow back to what now seems to be its growth trend of around 2.25 to 2.50 %.
The country exceeded growth expectations for first half of 2015 growing 2,3 % in Q3; and with 1,6 % GDP growth forecast for 2016, the Eurozone has declared Cyprus a success story.
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