In the final months of 2025, the U.S. labor market appears to have finally stabilized. Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report will ...
Forecasters believe U.S. employment numbers expanded modestly in December, extending a streak of labor market weakness that has prompted the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates several times.
Discover how efficiency variance reveals the gap between expected and actual inputs in production and its impact on labor, materials, and costs.
Abstract: This article concentrates on the variance-constrained distributed filtering problem with the constraint of limited bit rates and imperfect measurements for nonlinear time-varying systems.
The unemployment rate rose more than expected in November and previous jobs figures were revised downward as the first full report after months of a data fog revealed a weakening labor market. In ...
The latest jobs report shows U.S. hiring slowed in November and employers shed jobs in October, providing a clearer view of the labor market after months of data disruptions. American employers added ...
The job market continues to show signs of cooling. U.S. employers added just 64,000 jobs in November, according to a delayed report from the Labor Department Tuesday, while the unemployment rate rose ...
The U.S. added 64,000 jobs in November as the unemployment rate rose to 4.6 percent, according to delayed data released Tuesday by the Labor Department. Economists had forecast a gain of 40,000 jobs ...
The US economy added 64,000 jobs in November and lost 105,000 jobs in October, while the November unemployment rate rose to 4.6%. The data represents ongoing weakening in the labor market. Further ...
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell outlined how the central bank is viewing the labor market after it cut interest rates last week for the third straight time, with a fresh jobs report due out on ...
The Federal Reserve lowered interest rates for the third time in four months on Wednesday while signaling that further easing is far from assured.
Fed officials explained their opposition to the central bank’s decision this week to cut interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point. By Colby Smith Colby Smith cover the Federal Reserve.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results