SARA EISEN: What do you think, Stan, about the idea of fiscal stimulus in
the ninth year of an expansion?
Named to the four - year term by Trump, Powell succeeded Janet Yellen and inherited an economy in
its ninth year of expansion after emerging from the Great Recession.
Concerns about global trade tensions between China and the U.S. and the fear that the stellar earnings could be as good as it gets for stocks are all combining to undermine the sort of confidence that was in abundance during last year's run of repeated records for equity benchmarks, as the U.S. economy enters
it ninth year of expansion and as the Federal Reserve moves to normalize monetary policy from crisis - era levels.
While the U.S. economy is entering
its ninth year of expansion, economies in the rest of the world are much earlier in their cycle and may have room to grow.
As the U.S. economy approaches
its ninth year of expansion, unemployment has reached a 17 - year - low.
It's going to be a nightmare to get out; look at the Fed: here we are in
the ninth year of the expansion and the balance sheet hasn't shrunk one Dollar after raising three times.
Not exact matches
We are in the
ninth year of an unusually long economic
expansion, and while we believe the cycle has room to run, we see gradually rising rates and modestly higher inflation ahead.
The current business cycle, for starters, is entering its
ninth year, a longer - than - average period
of expansion.
Now there are times that the yield curve is inverted because we are predicting a slowdown in the economy but I don't think, you know, here we are into the eighth
year of economic
expansion,
ninth maybe, and it doesn't really seem to be any particular reason that that economic
expansion is going to die any time soon, so the traditional inverted yield curve «we're about to go into recession» I don't see.
Five things that could derail the
expansion, and one that would send it soaring The economy has its weak points, but giving innovation a freer hand would set off another round
of growthThe
expansion is going into its
ninth year, but there are things that could derail it.
«Here we are in the
ninth longest national economic
expansion and as we see over the last eight
years we keep cutting funding for a lot
of core state programs to pay for tax cuts for the wealthiest individuals in the state.»
But demand for space has remained high among new and growing companies as St. Louis marks its
ninth year of continued economic
expansion.
The mortgage industry is riding high as we enter the
ninth straight
year of economic
expansion.