Economy
Based on the information provided by the St. Louis Fed, the GDP indicators for the U.S. are as follows. The real GDP growth is at 3%. The trend for this indicator is upward, as it has increased steadily over the past four quarters. Real GDP growth was on a downward slide for all of 2010, however, bringing it to a very low level at the end of the year, which is a contributing factor in the economy being able to enjoy steady growth in 2011.
The consumer price index is currently at 0.3%. The general trend is flat, as only once in the past 10 quarters has the rate been above 0.4%, and only twice was it below 0.2%. While the CPI has fluctuated in the past two years, it has only done so within this narrow range.
Industrial production growth is at zero currently. The general trend is slightly declining, as there have been declines in the past three quarters. Large increases in industrial production have, over the past several years, been one month spikes, only to see the rate begin to slow over the next few months afterwards. There have been no trends of steadily increasing industrial production, only short spikes followed by steady decline in industrial production.
The interest rate measured by the St. Louis Fed is the 10-year Treasury rate, which currently sits just above 2%. This rate is generally decreasing, falling from a rate over 3.5% in early 2011. The current rate is just above the lowest level seen for this rate. The three-month Treasury rate is also provided on this graph. This is just above...
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