Job Openings Fell in November as Election and Pandemic Weighed on Labor Market
Restaurants, bars, and hotels led the way as the labor market weakened in November.

Restaurants, bars, and hotels led the way as the labor market weakened in November.

Imported goods from China are flooding ports in California as the United States trade deficit hits a 14-year high.

The best reading in nearly two-and-a-half years.

And the post-election decline was even more severe than expected.

The latest sign that the economy was stronger than many thought in the months leading up to the 2020 election.

Growth continued for the sixth straight month but the pace slackened in November.

The fourth regional Fed survey showing a decline in manufacturing activity following the 2020 election and surging coronavirius cases.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak has said Britain will prosper without a deal with the EU and will not accept one “at any price”, predicting that the Chinese coronavirus will be more economically impactful going into 2021 in any case.

Politics and pandemic are weighing down Midwest manufacturing.

Regional Fed surveys show the manufacturing sector is slowing.

A better than expected rebound for U.S. factory output led industrial output higher in October.

A survey of business conditions taken while infections surged and election day occurred indicates slower growth.

A government advisory body in India recently launched a campaign to boycott Chinese-made plastic lights for the upcoming Hindu festival of Diwali in favor of domestically manufactured oil lamps made of cow dung.

Hiring and job postings rose in September while layoffs declined sharply.

New orders, production, and employment grew in October, signaling a stronger than expected recovery for U.S. factories.

Americans are about to decide whether or not to give President Donald Trump a second term. One of his key selling points is the progress we have made in restoring American manufacturing.

President Donald Trump won his first term in office on a promise to revive American manufacturing and end the devastation that decades of globalism had inflicted on America’s factory towns and cities.

Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden is promising to return the United States to a globalized economic model, suggesting that the fate of U.S. tariffs on China will depend on what Europe and Canada’s leaders want.

Breitbart News entertainment editor Jerome Hudson appeared on Fox News’ Fox & Friends morning show on Tuesday to discuss his latest book 50 Things They Don’t Want You to Know About Trump. The conversation focused on how the president revived manufacturing in the United States and brought about the return of the country’s energy independence.

Manufacturing activity in the Carolinas, Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland strengthened in October, according to a survey from the Richmond Fed released Tuesday. The composite index, compiled from surveys taken from manufacturing businesses in the Fed’s Fifth District, rose from

“If President Trump wins, our future looks bright, and if Mr. Biden wins, it will be gloom and doom for long period of time,” an executive from a metals manufacturer told the Dallas Fed

Since the Trump Administration’s red-tape–cutting policies and the tax cut and reform law passed in December 2017, manufacturers added 467,000 jobs, more than six times the 73,000 manufacturing jobs added in Obama’s last two years.

Without policies to protect manufacturing from China’s predatory policies, Pennsylvania would have been much worse off during the pandemic

Delaware lost its only auto plants while Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden was in the United States Senate, representing the state, and serving as vice president in the Obama administration.

Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) said during Wednesday night’s vice presidential debate that Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden is “responsible for saving America’s auto industry.”

Boeing said on Monday it will design and develop military aircraft, including unmanned vehicles, in Australia — the first time in its 100 year history it has done so outside the United States.

Construction, manufacturing, transportation, and hospitality led the gains.

Orders for longer-lasting goods are back above 95 percent of their pre-pandemic level.

Another hole has been punched in the leftist promise of a so-called “green jobs revolution”, as wind turbine manufacturing jobs are sent to Communist-run China and the Middle East.

Business conditions are improving faster than expected.

China is set to invest “hundreds of billions of yuan” into essential manufacturing and technology projects through a joint venture between the country’s industry ministry and the state-backed China Development Bank, the government announced Friday.

Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden defended his supporting China’s entering the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001, saying he was not “naive” about the global superpower.

The manufacturing sector continues to recover from the depth of the pandemic shutdowns.

Reshoring of jobs to the United States spiked in 2019 to the highest rate, outside the Great Recession period, since at least 2002, though corporations continue offshoring American jobs, research reveals.

China’s official manufacturing data, released on Monday, showed a decline in manufacturing linked to widespread flooding in August.

Manufacturing continues to expand in August but at a slower pace than in July.

The White House is looking at a number of ways to boost American-made products and reshore vital industries to the United States from abroad, special assistant to President Trump for domestic policy Theo Wold says.

President Donald Trump on Wednesday touted a V-shaped economic recovery despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic in the United States.

July saw the third straight month of rising production in Texas manufacturing plants.

President Donald Trump on Friday praised Tesla CEO Elon Musk for announcing plans to build an electric auto plant in Texas.
