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Oct 9, 2024 |
bloomberglinea.com | Jennifer Welch |Maeva Cousin |Eleonora Mavroeidi |Bhargavi Sakthivel |Gerard DiPippo |Tom Orlik
Bloomberg — Una guerra caliente en Ucrania, una guerra comercial entre China y EE.UU. y la amenaza de Donald Trump de aumentar drásticamente los aranceles plantean la perspectiva de una ruptura acelerada de los lazos internacionales. Para la economía mundial, las consecuencias serían significativas y negativas.
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Oct 8, 2024 |
bloomberg.com | Jennifer Welch |Maeva Cousin |Eleonora Mavroeidi |Bhargavi Sakthivel |Gerard DiPippo |Tom Orlik
How three scenarios for international cooperation—from a second Cold War to a return of go-go globalization—would change the world economy. A hot war in Ukraine, a trade war between China and the US, and Donald Trump’s threat of sweeping tariff increases raise the prospect of an accelerated rupture of international ties. For the global economy, the consequences would be significant—and negative.
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Apr 10, 2024 |
taipeitimes.com | Enda Curran |Natalia Drozdiak |Bhargavi Sakthivel
By Enda Curran, Natalia Drozdiak and Bhargavi Sakthivel / Bloomberg A new era of global rearmament is gathering pace, and it would mean vast costs and some tough decisions for Western governments already struggling with shaky public finances.
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Apr 9, 2024 |
finance.yahoo.com | Enda Curran |Natalia Drozdiak |Bhargavi Sakthivel
(Bloomberg) -- A new era of global rearmament is gathering pace, and it will mean vast costs and some tough decisions for western governments already struggling with shaky public finances.
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Apr 9, 2024 |
bloomberg.com | Enda Curran |Natalia Drozdiak |Bhargavi Sakthivel
The US and its allies are just starting to come to terms with the vast increase in defense spending required to counterbalance the militaries of Russia and China. A new era of global rearmament is gathering pace, and it will mean vast costs and some tough decisions for western governments already struggling with shaky public finances.
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Apr 6, 2024 |
sentinelsource.com | Bhargavi Sakthivel |Maeva Cousin |David Wilcox
The Congressional Budget Office warned in its latest projections that U.S. federal government debt is on a path from 97 percent of GDP last year to 116 percent by 2034 — higher even than in World War II. The actual outlook is likely worse. From tax revenue to defense spending and interest rates, the CBO forecasts released earlier this year are underpinned by rosy assumptions. Plug in the market’s current view on interest rates, and the debt-to-GDP ratio rises to 123 percent in 2034.
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Apr 3, 2024 |
finans.dk | Bhargavi Sakthivel |Maeva Cousin |David Wilcox
03/04/2024 KL. 07:10 For abonnenter The Congressional Budget Office warned in its latest projections that US federal government debt is on a path from 97% of GDP last year to 116% by 2034 - higher even than in World War II. The actual outlook is likely worse. From tax revenue to defense spending and interest rates, the CBO forecasts released earlier this year Log ind Få adgang til FINANS - Overblik, inspiration og indsigt i dansk og internationalt erhvervsliv.
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Apr 2, 2024 |
edwardconard.com | Bhargavi Sakthivel |Maeva Cousin |David Wilcox |Victoria Zaretskaya
A Bloomberg analysis argues the US debt outlook is fragile, with servicing costs reaching 5.4% of GDP by 2034, 1.5x what was spent on defense last year. Bloomberg Economics has built a forecast model using market pricing for future interest rates and data on the maturity profile of bonds. Keeping all the CBO’s other assumptions in place, that shows debt equaling 123% of GDP for 2034.
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Apr 2, 2024 |
orlandosentinel.com | Bhargavi Sakthivel |Maeva Cousin |David Wilcox
The Congressional Budget Office warned in its latest projections that U.S. federal government debt is on a path from 97% of GDP last year to 116% by 2034 — higher even than in World War II. The actual outlook is likely worse. From tax revenue to defense spending and interest rates, the CBO forecasts released earlier this year are underpinned by rosy assumptions. Plug in the market’s current view on interest rates, and the debt-to-GDP ratio rises to 123% in 2034.
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Apr 2, 2024 |
mercurynews.com | Bhargavi Sakthivel |Maeva Cousin |David Wilcox
By Bhargavi Sakthivel, Maeva Cousin and David Wilcox, Bloomberg NewsThe Congressional Budget Office warned in its latest projections that U.S. federal government debt is on a path from 97% of GDP last year to 116% by 2034 — higher even than in World War II. The actual outlook is likely worse. From tax revenue to defense spending and interest rates, the CBO forecasts released earlier this year are underpinned by rosy assumptions.