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On air and online, the PBS NewsHour provides in-depth analysis of the issues that matter to you.
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Virginia Voter Megan Tolosa 'This Election Is About the Economy'
Collected in pbsnewshour's videos May 4, 2012 -
People, Banks 'Still Cautious' on Credit, Debts
In another discussion in our series After the Fall that examines what's changed and what hasn't since the 2008 financial crisis, Jeffrey Brown discusses consumer and marketplace attitudes toward credit and debt with Adam Levin of Credit.com, James Chessen of the American Bankers Association and Kathy Kristof of CBS MoneyWatch.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos May 4, 2012 -
After the Fall: How Has Wall Street's Behavior Changed?
When Dodd-Frank regulations went into effect in the wake of the financial crisis, the intention was to create new oversight and reduce systemic risk. Part of our After the Fall series on what's happened since the meltdown, Jeffrey Brown and guests discuss how Wall Street has changed since the financial catastrophe.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Apr 28, 2012 -
Social Security Slated to Run Dry in 2033, Trustees Warn
Social Security will exhaust its trust fund in 2033 -- three years earlier than previous projections, the program's trustees announced Monday. Ray Suarez, Nancy Altman of Social Security Works and the Heritage Foundation's David John discuss its long-term health amid a retiring baby boomer population and a weakened economy.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Apr 25, 2012 -
Indiana Voter Jack Crawford 'This Election Is About the Economy'
Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Apr 22, 2012 -
Indiana RV Industry's Comeback Amid An Uncertain Economy
The all-electric Think car was supposed to help save Elkhart, Ind., from a languishing economy, but instead the area's longstanding RV industry is making a comeback and helping turn the economy around. Special correspondent Elizabeth Brackett of WTTW Chicago reports on some economic hope for an area hid hard by unemployment.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Apr 12, 2012 -
Shields, Ponnuru on U.S. Economy, Santorum's Standing in GOP
Syndicated columnist Mark Shields and the National Review's Ramesh Ponnuru, sitting in for David Brooks, discuss the week's top news including a weaker-than expected March jobs report, American economic attitudes, Mitt Romney's polling problems, Rick Santorum's standing in the GOP and presidential pressure on the Supreme Court.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Apr 9, 2012 -
Jobs Report Prompts More Questions Over Size of Labor Force
New jobs numbers released Friday showed unemployment ticking down to 8.2 percent, the lowest since January 2009, despite only 121,000 jobs added in March. Judy Woodruff and The Economist's Greg Ip discuss what's behind the weaker-than-expected report and why many Americans appear to be dropping out of the labor force altogether.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Apr 9, 2012 -
Watch Mitt Romney's Full Speech After Illinois Primary Win: 'We've Had Enough'
For more on Mitt Romney and Vote 2012: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/topic/politics/ Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney addressed a crowd of supporters Tuesday night in Schaumburg, Ill., saying that "elections are about choices and today hundreds of thousands of people in Illinois have joined millions of people across the country to join our cause." The former Massachusetts governor also wasted little time taking aim and his potential general election opponent.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Mar 22, 2012 -
Fictional Thriller Tackles Dangers of High-Frequency Trading
Part of his series on Making $ense of financial news, economics correspondent Paul Solman spoke with author Robert Harris whose fictional take on Wall Street, "The Fear Index," stresses the dangers of algorithm-driven, high-frequency trading.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Mar 19, 2012 -
Post-Revolution Tunisia Attempts Painful Transition to Democracy
One year after the revolution that sparked the Arab Spring, Tunisia faces ongoing economic and political struggles as it attempts a painful transition to democracy. Jessie Deeter reports, as part of a collaboration with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Feb 17, 2012 -
Obama, Republicans Square Off Over $3.8 Trillion Budget Plan
Unveiling a $3.8 trillion budget blueprint on Monday, President Obama cast the plan as an essential tool to spur economic growth and noted that tough choices would put the country "on a more sustainable fiscal path." Republicans called the plan a "campaign document." Ray Suarez reports.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Feb 14, 2012 -
Debating Obama's Vision for the U.S. Economy
In his State of the Union Address Tuesday night, President Obama spoke about his economic goals for the country. Gwen Ifill discusses the broader points, including fairness, taxes and American manufacturing, with Heather Boushey of the Center for American Progress and Douglas Holtz-Eakin of the American Action Forum.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Jan 29, 2012 -
Watch Ron Paul's Speech After South Carolina Primary
Click for more on Ron Paul and Vote 2012: http://to.pbs.org/SCliveblog Texas Congressman Ron Paul addressed a crowd of supporters in South Carolina after being projected to finish fourth in the Palmetto State's Saturday primary. Paul pointed out that after Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, only 37 delegates have been allocated so far -- "something like 1.5 percent," he said.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Jan 24, 2012 -
Bonuses Shrink as Wall Street Reacts to Crawling Economy
As members of the Occupy movement sought answers on Capital Hill Tuesday, reports also circulated that bonuses on Wall Street will be lower this year. Judy Woodruff discusses what the declining dollars tell us about the big firms with financial writer William Cohan and compensation consultant Brian Foley.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Jan 18, 2012 -
Records: Federal Reserve Officials Foresaw, Joked About Housing Bubble in 2006
Newly released transcripts from the Federal Reserve's 2006 meetings reveal the extent of what Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues actually knew as the country was about to hit the cusp of the financial crisis. Ray Suarez discusses the board's detailed conversations with The New York Times' Binyamin Appelbaum.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Jan 15, 2012 -
The Strange, Animal-Killing Side Effects of Tax Policy Changes
Arthur Laffer, economist to Ronald Reagan and famous for the Laffer Curve theory, had reason to be concerned. In the 1980s he received death threats for his role in reducing taxes on wealthy Americans.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Jan 15, 2012 -
Taxes: How High Is Too High?
Economics correspondent Paul Solman explores the question of just how high U.S. tax rates should or shouldn't be and examines the relationship between economic activity and tax rates.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Jan 12, 2012 -
How the U.S. Economy, Americans Fared in 2011
From the jobless rate to a discouraging housing market and an aggravated lot of indebted college graduates, the year's defining economic stories kept a downbeat theme. Ray Suarez discusses 2011's economic impact with The Atlantic's Don Peck, the University of Pennsylvania's Annette Lareau and The Chicago Sun-Times' Terry Savage.Collected in pbsnewshour's videos Jan 1, 2012
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May 4, 2012