G4Media.ro

FMI se așteaptă la o scădere record a PIB-ului în Zona Euro

Susține-ne activitatea G4Media logo
Donație Paypal recurentă

Donează lunar pentru susținerea proiectului G4Media

Donează prin Transfer Bancar

CONT LEI: RO89RZBR0000060019874867

Deschis la Raiffeisen Bank
Donează prin Patreon

Donează

Citește și...

1 comentariu

  1. criză ? unde ? 🙂 https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ximpim.nr0.htm
    The price index for U.S. imports declined 2.3 percent in March, the largest monthly drop since import prices fell 3.2 percent in January 2015. The March decline followed a 0.7-percent decrease in February and 0.2-percent advances in each of the 3 months prior to that. Import prices also fell on a 12-month basis, declining 4.1 percent from March 2019 to March 2020. The decrease was the largest over-the-year drop since the Index fell 4.7 percent for the 12 months ended June 2016. (See table 1.)
    Fuel Imports: Import fuel prices fell 26.8 percent in March, after decreasing 9.0 percent in February. The March decline, led by a 27.4-percent drop in petroleum prices, was the largest decrease in import fuel prices since the index fell 27.8 percent in November 2008. The decline in petroleum prices followed an 8.8-percent drop the previous month. Natural gas prices also fell in March, decreasing 16.5 percent, after declining 14.0 percent in February and 12.2 percent in January. Import fuel prices fell 36.2 percent over the past year;
    lower petroleum prices and natural gas prices both contributed to the decline.
    All Imports Excluding Fuel: Import prices excluding fuel were unchanged in March following 0.3-percent increases in February and January. In March, lower prices for consumer goods and foods, feeds, and beverages offset advancing prices for automotive vehicles, nonfuel industrial supplies and materials, and capital goods. Prices for nonfuel imports decreased 0.5 percent for the year ended in March.
    Nonfuel Industrial Supplies and Materials: The price index for nonfuel industrial supplies and materials rose 0.4 percent in March, after increasing 1.0 percent in February. The March advance was led by a 1.2-percent rise in unfinished metals prices and a 2.3-percent increase in prices for building materials.