Economic Development - An Economic Outlook by Jack Lavery
- Biography
- November 15, 2009 – “Liquidity Everywhere, Credit Still Tight”
- November 22, 2009 – “The Dimensions of Weakness in the Recovery”
- November 29, 2009 – “The Recovery Grinds Forward”
- December 6, 2009 – “The Upside Surprise in the Employment Data”
- December 14, 2009 – “An Improved Tone”
- December 28, 2009 – “Some Momentum Going Into 2010″
- January 3, 2010 – “Recovery will Endure and Widen”
- January 24, 2010 – “Investor Worries”
- January 31, 2010 – “Major Potholes in the Path of an Enduring Recovery”
- February 8, 2010 – “The Glass Is Half-Full, Not Half-Empty”
- February 15, 2010 – “The Challenges in Europe; Tightening by China”
- February 21, 2010 – “A Fourth Problem”
- February 28, 2009 – “The Recovery Faces Deceleration”
- March 8, 2010 – “The U.S. Consumer Is Not Dead”
- March 14, 2009 – “Household Sector Net Worth Continues Its Revival”
- March 21, 2010 – “The Return of Market Angst”
- March 28, 2010 – Data Scan: the Good, the Bad and the Ugly
- April 4, 2010 – “The Labor Market Speaks & So Does Manufacturing”
- April 11, 2010 – “Climbing the Wall of Worry”
- April 18, 2010 – “A Tale of Two Consumers”
- April 26, 2010 – “The Recovery Defies Its Cynics”
Jack Lavery is currently a Senior Executive Fellow in Financial Economics at the University of Maine. The School of Economics will host his weekly publications to inform the UMaine community as well as the public of current economic trends.
If you wish to contact either Jack Lavery or the Lavery Consulting Group:
jlavery@laveryconsultinggroup.com
Any other questions can be sent to Director George Criner.
Image Description: Lavery
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