• Gross domestic product growth doubled to 8% in fiscal year 2003, putting it among Asia's fastest-growing economies.

    FORBES: India's Richest Businesspeople

  • Another chart shows that whenever money-supply growth has exceeded gross domestic product growth, small-caps tend to rise.

    FORBES: This Time, Inflation Will Be Good For Stocks

  • Also, China reported a year-over-year Gross Domestic Product growth rate of 7.7% for the first quarter of 2013.

    FORBES: Wimpy Global Economy Will Drag On Freeport McMoRan's Earnings

  • Similarly, the BEA pegs gross domestic product growth for the fourth quarter of 2006 at a measly 2.2%.

    FORBES: Stealth Stock Boom Set To Fly

  • Gross domestic product growth this year is expected to be less than 3% for the first time since 2003.

    FORBES: The South Rises Again

  • Beijing said on Monday that gross domestic product growth slowed to 7.7% year over year in the first quarter.

    WSJ: Blackstone Takes Aim at Asia

  • This sparked new business ventures, job growth and annual gross domestic product growth of over 7% in recent years.

    FORBES: Ambassador To Pakistan's Economy

  • Analysts estimate that poor infrastructure facilities in the country remove about two percentage points from gross domestic product growth.

    WSJ: India Probing Money-Laundering Charges Against Banks

  • Gross domestic product growth fell below economists' 3.2% forecast and well off the robust 5.6% pace of the first quarter.

    FORBES

  • Based on that, Credit Suisse says, new orders are still consistent with global gross domestic product growth of about 4.5% to 5%.

    FORBES: A Double-Dip Recession? Bah Humbug

  • Chinese gross domestic product growth slowed again in the third quarter of this year.

    WSJ: The End of the Commodities Boom?

  • The RBI said it expects gradual economic recovery in the fiscal year started April 1, and forecast gross domestic product growth of 5.7%.

    WSJ: India Cuts Policy Rate

  • Gross domestic product growth slowed to just over 2% during the second half of 2006, following a robust 5.6% clip during the prior three months.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • The harm will show up in lower gross domestic product growth.

    FORBES: Capital Gains Tax is an Economic Monkey Wrench (2012)

  • Due to the retirement of the baby boomers, real gross domestic product growth is projected to slowly decline from 3% in 2009 to 2.8% by 2013.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • With second-quarter Gross Domestic Product growth preliminarily reported at an uninspiring 2.4%, it looks unlikely that share prices will surge on the back of an economic boom.

    FORBES: High-Yield For Low Growth

  • Their contribution to world gross domestic product growth is expected to become larger than in the past, as structural deleveraging in the developed world will likely persist throughout 2013.

    FORBES: New Year Shaping Up To Be Big One For Asia

  • Here are some numbers that may be pertinent to your near-term asset allocation decisions: Over the past 50 years, annual U.S. Gross Domestic Product growth has averaged 3.2%.

    FORBES: High-Yield For Low Growth

  • It estimates U.S. gross domestic product growth to increase from 1.8 percent in the first quarter, to a 3 to 3.5 percent range for the rest of this year and next.

    FORBES: Wall Street Reduces S&P 500 Target

  • Just a year ago, India was an investor darling, accustomed to near double-digit gross domestic product growth and talk of rivalry with China to be the fastest-growing big economy in the world.

    WSJ: As Growth Stutters, India Woos Foreign Investment

  • Small caps will likely growth 20% in terms of earnings per share in 2012, according to JP Morgan, which basis its estimate on gross domestic product growth ranging from 2.5% to 3%.

    FORBES: 5 Investment Ideas From Wall Street: Jan. 20

  • U.'s statistical office, Eurostat, also confirmed that the euro zone exited the recession in the third quarter of 2009, with gross domestic product growth of 0.4% quarter on quarter, following five quarters of contraction.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • At an afternoon session, panelists said the European stress tests should be more severe than the U.S. tests where a severe scenario was defined as one where there was minus 3% gross domestic product growth.

    FORBES: Analysts Stress About European Bank Stress Tests

  • Thanks largely to energy revenue, Russia this summer paid off debts to foreign creditors well ahead of schedule, economists expect gross domestic product growth of 6.5% for 2006, and the market is up 35% this year.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • At the same time, gross domestic product growth slowed to 2.5% in the second quarter from 5.6% in the first quarter, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, in line with a similar deceleration in personal spending.

    FORBES: Fed Takes A Breath

  • The consensus expects 1.2% gross domestic product growth this year but Germany, which is 50% larger than the peripheral countries of Europe, is on track to achieve GDP growth of 3% or more, the Swiss bank says.

    FORBES: Sell The Euro, But Buy Europe

  • Although China and other emerging markets are expected to keep having faster gross domestic product growth than the U.S., our advantage in wealth, in real GDP per capita, is expected to persist, dwarfing China and other emerging markets.

    FORBES: Manufacturing May Be Coming Back to the U.S., Long-Term

  • On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve lowered its forecast for U.S. gross-domestic product growth to a range of 1.9% to 2.4% half a point lower than earlier estimates while extending its bond buying to boost the economy.

    WSJ: Is It Time to Sell Treasurys?

  • In the San Francisco metropolitan area, where this shift has been pronounced over the past decade, computer and electronic-product manufacturing accounted for 11% of gross-domestic-product growth in the region from 2005 to 2010, outpacing all other industries.

    WSJ: Late Shift: Foosball Over Finance

  • U.--generally experience slower growth than the U.S. with respect to measures like gross domestic product and job growth.

    FORBES: New Geographer

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