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Trump tariffs leads China to declare readiness for 鈥榚conomic shocks鈥

According to the Center for Economic and Business Research (CEBR) at Western Washington University, Trump鈥檚 tariffs have unleashed a new 鈥淐hina shock,鈥 devastating jobs in emerging economies from Mexico to Indonesia as Chinese exports flood their markets. The situation is鈥

Seattle-area inflation slows. Here鈥檚 what鈥檚 still driving up prices

The Seattle-area inflation rate is also higher than the national inflation rate of 2.6%, and the core rate of 3.3%. That means costs in the region are increasing a bit more quickly compared with the U.S. average, explained Hart Hodges, associate professor at Western Washington University鈥

Machinists return to work at an unsettled Boeing after 8-week strike

Hart Hodges and James McCafferty, co-directors of the Center for Economic and Business Research at Western Washington University, said the impact of the strike on the local economy is more likely to come as delayed spending, rather than permanent changes to economic activity.

For many job seekers, WA job market still far from a pre-pandemic norm

Taken as a whole, Washington鈥檚 鈥渓abor market still tilts in favor of [job] seekers,鈥 says James McCafferty, co-director at the Center for Economic & Business Research at Western Washington University. But in some sectors, McCafferty concedes, 鈥渋t may not feel like it.鈥濃

Pandemic shopping spree creates economic windfall for rural communities

Before the pandemic, many rural counties struggled to bring in enough taxes to fund services.

But a change in how we collect sales tax, followed by a pandemic, has turned things around for some of them, at least for now.

To understand what changed, you have to go back to 2008.鈥

Lagging behind national trend, Seattle workers not in hurry to return to the office

This spring many Seattle-area firms began reopening their offices and tempting workers back with promises of pizza, spontaneous workplace joviality and other all-but-forgotten pleasures of in-person employment.

To which many office workers appear to have said, 鈥渕eh鈥 鈥 much to the dismay鈥

With gas prices giving folks sticker shock, what will it do to Whatcom鈥檚 economy?

While Whatcom County residents are suffering from sticker shock as they pump gasoline, local economists are weighing what impact the price increase will have on the overall local economy.

The average price for a gallon of gas in Whatcom County hit $4.61, according to AAA Washington. That鈥

Editorial: Kids need a week in the woods for outdoor learning

Ask former Everett School District students about Camp Silverton, and you鈥檙e likely to hear tales from former fifth-grade campers and high school counselors of days spent identifying trees and plants, visiting historic mines and the Big Four ice caves, testing river water for pH levels, sleeping鈥

Data analysis shows the big shifts coming to Kitsap's economy

Here at KEDA (Kitsap Economic Development Alliance), we just updated our Kitsap Community Economic Profile in partnership with Western Washington University鈥檚 Center for Economic and Business Research. In this publication we traditionally favor accuracy over speed, so we鈥檙e mostly using 2020鈥

During the pandemic Whatcom bankruptcy filings have tumbled to record lows. Here鈥檚 why

Despite plenty of pandemic-related shocks to the Whatcom economy, bankruptcy filings in 2021 set a record low. Last year, 155 bankruptcies of all chapters were filed in Whatcom County, according to data from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court Western District of Washington in Seattle. That鈥檚 down 25%鈥

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