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Double dip recession fears as High St reports worst January sales in 15 years
3 hours ago ago from Celebrity Gossip Hollywood Gossip News Entertainment» Business News, Entertainment, Celebrity, Gossip And More
Analysts warned that the dire retail figures and the marginal of the growth recorded at the end of 2009 could lead to a double dip recession.
Related contentGrenadine Islands Tourism
4 hours ago ago from TradeWindsAdvisors.net
Agriculture, including banana produce, is the largest part of the Grenadine Island’s economy. However, tourism is also another important part of income for the islands. It has been difficult for the government to start new industries and there is a high unemployment rate of about twenty-two percent. That fact that the country is overly dependant on a single crop is the biggest hindrance to the economic growth of the Grenadine Islands. Also, ...
Related contentHGH – Human Growth Hormone
21 hours ago ago from Youthful New You
HGH is found at higher levels in our body when we were young. It is the one responsible for the rapid growth and high metabolic rate we experienced as teenagers. Actually keeping high HGH levels is the secret to reversing the aging process. HGH is called somatotropin. More
Related contentUK sales fall prompts fears of ... recession
1 hour, 55 minutes ago ago from New Media Blog
Telegraph [UK], by Edmund Conway Posted By: Photoonist- Tue, 09 Feb 2010 20:25:07 GMT Fears that Britain may already be succumbing to a ''double'dip'' recession materialised as it emerged that 2010 opened with the worst January for the high street since comparable records began 15 years ago. The VAT increase and unprecedented blizzards last month contributed to a sudden and unexpected collapse in retail sales, according to the British Retail ...
Related contentThe CBO’s Budget Outlook: Not Good
6 hours ago ago from Healthcare Economist
In January, the CBO released a report titled The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2010 to 2020 . A summary of the findings is available on the CBO Director's blog . Today, however, I focus on CBO's evaluation of how changes in health care spending affect the federal budget. Medicaid spending (excluding stimulus funding) increased by 9 percent ($18 billion) in 2009—exceeding its 7 percent average annual growth rate of ...
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