Optimism About a Bigger Paycheck Is At a New High for the Year
A plurality of working Americans still expects to be earning more money from their job a year from today.
A plurality of working Americans still expects to be earning more money from their job a year from today.
Voters continue to believe that raising taxes and increasing government spending will dig our economy deeper in a hole, and they don’t see things getting any better under the Obama administration.
For the first time in over a year, a slight majority of working Americans say staying with their current company offers the best opportunity for advancement.
Here are some more tax breaks America's small businesses really need.
So much for work-life balance.
Fewer than half of workers nationwide plan to use all of their vacation time this year, and a majority says they stay connected with work during the time-off they do take.
Consumers may be feeling the holiday spirit early, as their increased optimism toward the economy and their personal finances in October led to a rise in the Discover U.S. Spending Monitor for the first time since May.
Male and female workers continue to disagree over whether they earn equal pay for equal work.
For the second straight month, the Rasmussen Employment Index moves to its highest level since September 2008.
Most Americans continue to think government workers have it better than those who work in the private sector.
When faced with a budget crisis, most Americans think "it's always better to cut taxes than to increase government spending because taxpayers, not bureaucrats, are the best judges of how to spend their money."
By the time you read this, the election of 2010 will be over, and we
will have some idea of what Congress will look like for the next two years.
Three-quarters (76%) of American adults know someone who is out of work and looking for a job, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. But that's a slight improvement from August when 81% knew someone in that situation.
Voters overwhelmingly prefer a free market economy to an economy managed by the government and think government economic control helps big businesses at the expense of small ones.
As a small-business columnist, I get at least several press releases a day from public relations firms around the country that are trying to get their clients a mention in this column. Most represent authors promoting their "new" ideas (sadly, few qualify), consultants trolling for clients or successful entrepreneurs selling their "how I did it" stories (mostly to investors or larger companies that may wish to buy them).
Most Americans feel the federal government has too much money and doesn't spend it well.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke announced today his committee’s intent to combat persistently low inflation and high unemployment rates, calling the situation “a case for further action.”
The attorney generals of all 50 states have jointly launched an investigation into the lending practices of several big banks and mortgage companies that led to hundreds of thousands of ongoing home foreclosures.
Buying a home used to be a major milestone in life and thought of as one of, if not the best investment for a family. Today, Americans aren’t quite as sure.
Americans continue to show a lack of confidence in the stability of the U.S. banking industry.
Now more than ever, homeowners expect to see the value of their home go down over the next year.