The hotly awaited October 2012 Jobs Report, released by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics this announced this morning that job growth was higher than expected at 171,000 jobs added in October 2012
The hotly awaited October 2012 Jobs Report, released by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics this announced this morning that job growth was higher than expected at 171,000 jobs added in October 2012
Election Update: See where the presidential candidate stand in the final months before the 2012 Election.
Californians Go to the Polls While national attention on the Republican primary election has fizzled out as Mitt Romney hit 1,144 delegates last week, Californians are expected to come out.
During this period of economic crises for our country and its people, one would think the priority of national leaders would be finding solutions and working together to right the ship of state.
March’s jobs report has been called everything from disappointing to inconsequential, reinforcing the view that nobody knows what they’re talking about when it comes to measuring the economy’s performance on a month-by-month basis.
Fresh off the heels of Bureau of Labor Statistics findings that slightly fewer Americans were jobless in November – reflecting an expected uptick in temporary and seasonal employment, as well.