News

President Trump called in to speak with CNBC's Joe Kernen on Tuesday morning to explain firing the head of the Bureau of ...
Joe Kernen confronted Donald Trump, telling him that firing a labor statistics official after an underwhelming jobs report ...
Last week’s jobs report may have bolstered the case for a September rate cut by the Federal Reserve, but it may be too soon ...
Economists and Wall Street investors have long considered the job figures reliable, with share prices and bond yields often ...
The Bureau of Labor Statistics' jobs report revisions are standard practice to improve data accuracy as more businesses ...
Instead of considering economic explanations for the low jobs number, the president’s response was to punish the messenger.
What do we do when the president of the United States behaves this way? On Friday, President Trump fired the head of the ...
Opinion: The flexibility of the U.S. labor market means that it has shrugged off many waves of technological change.
Trump's firing of BLS chief Erika McEntarfer over labor statistics could backfire as a potential recession looms.
Trump’s knee-jerk response to troublesome data is to deny it. He has eliminated climate change and disease statistics that contradict his views.
US stocks close higher as investors price in a Fed rate cut soon and easing trade worries. EU delays retaliatory tariffs and Switzerland aims for deal ...