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Patrice Hill

Patrice Hill was a staff writer for The Washington Times.

Articles by Patrice Hill

In this April 24, 2012, file photo, women and girls carry purchases on the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica, Calif. The Commerce Department said Friday, April 27, 2012, that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 2.2 percent in the January-March quarter, compared with a 3 percent gain in the final quarter of 2011. Consumers spent at the fastest pace in more than a year. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File)

U.S. growth slows to 2.2 percent in first quarter

Growth in the U.S. economy slowed to 2.2 percent in the first quarter from 3 percent at the end of last year, even as unusually mild winter weather gave a strong boost to consumer spending and car sales, the Commerce Department reported Friday morning. Published April 27, 2012

Gas prices are posted at gas stations in Breezewood, Pa., Monday, April 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

Gas prices stall early in season

Gasoline prices appear to have peaked more than a month earlier than usual this year at less than $4 a gallon, reflecting reduced tensions with Iran and declining demand for fuel in the U.S. and China, oil analysts say. Published April 17, 2012

Auto workers stack the inner door panel for the Ford Explorer on April 4, 2012, at the Ford Stamping Plant in Chicago Heights, Ill. (Associated Press)

Jobless rate falls again, but job growth disappoints

The U.S. unemployment rate slipped further to a three-year low of 8.2 percent last month as businesses kept churning out new jobs, the Labor Department reported Friday morning. Published April 6, 2012

"The Great Depression informed the Fed's actions and decisions in the recent crisis," Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said at George Washington University, noting the Fed's multiple missteps during the 1930s in failing to stem the financial panics, bank runs and economic downspiral that created such desperate conditions. (Associated Press)

Bernanke: Fed actions prevented a depression

For Americans who have forgotten, or who never knew, how much worse things could get — shantytowns, gnawing hunger and a desperate 1 in 4 people out of work — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke is providing a reminder. Published March 28, 2012

Newly printed $20 notes are seen at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) ** FILE **

Fed more upbeat about economic outlook

The Federal Reserve upgraded its outlook on the U.S. economy Tuesday, noting recent strong improvements in the job market while downplaying higher gasoline prices that are temporarily stoking inflation. Published March 13, 2012

President Barack Obama speaks at a campaign event at Minute Maid Park, Friday, March, 9, 2012, in Houston, Texas. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Obama’s re-election fortunes ride on rising economy

President Obama's re-election prospects are getting a boost from the plunging unemployment rate and the pickup in the economy and financial markets this year, economic and political analysts say. Published March 11, 2012

An ironworker with Local Union 416 carries steel rods for a retaining wall at a construction site in Los Angeles on March 6, 2012. (Associated Press)

Strong job gains hold unemployment down to 8.3 percent

The rapid improvement in the nation's job market continued in February with employers adding another 227,000 jobs — enough new openings to hold the unemployment rate at 8.3 percent, the Labor Department reported Friday morning. Published March 9, 2012

Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping speaks Feb. 15, 2012, to the US-China Business Council in Washington. (Associated Press)

China’s appetite for commodities a boon for businesses

While much of the world is still struggling to recover from the great slump of the past few years, nations and states that cater to China's enormous appetite for energy, food, metals and other commodities have been doing swimmingly. Published February 26, 2012

Antonya Huntenburg, 21, of Hillsborough, N.J., a student at the Corcoran College of Art and Design, says everyone she knows is under some kind of economic pressure, including her parents. She says she joined the Occupy D.C. encampment on McPherson Square "to be safe." (Rod Lamkey Jr./The Washington Times)

Youths show economic frustration in streets around the world

After the Great Recession swept through the global economy and crushed the job prospects and financial security of millions of young people, thousands took to the streets in the past year from Cairo and Moscow to Washington and Wall Street to demand a new economic and political order. Published February 20, 2012

Nicholas Rastenis takes a break from his full-time job in a Chicago drugstore photo lab. Mr. Rastenis, a Yale graduate with a master's degree in fine arts, is underemployed, but is doing better than many of his fellow millennials. (Brian Kersey/Special to The Washington Times)

Millennials forced to put lives on hold

Nicholas Rastenis has been through the wringer. After getting a master's degree in fine arts from Yale University in 2008, he expected to land a job at a top design firm. But nearly four years later, after many months of joblessness, austerity and anxiety, his ambitions in life have come down quite a bit. Published February 19, 2012

Daniela Silvero (left), an admissions officer at ASA College, discusses job opportunities Jan. 25, 2012, with Patrick Rosarie, who is seeking a job in IT, during JobEXPO's job fair, in New York. (Associated Press)

Unemployment rate falls to 8.3 percent with broad hiring gains

The U.S. economy was firing on all cylinders in January, drawing the unemployment rate down to a three-year low of 8.3 percent and creating nearly a quarter million new jobs, the Labor Department reported Friday morning. Published February 3, 2012

In this Jan. 28, 2012 photo. job seekers Cameo Taylor, left, and Angelique McGuire, center, both of San Francisco, wait in line to register at a Career Fair event in San Francisco. The number of people seeking unemployment aid fell last week, a sign that companies are cutting fewer jobs and likely stepping up hiring. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

Jobless rate has fallen because of dropouts

The big drop in the unemployment rate in recent months came at a fortunate time for President Obama, but economists say it as much because of young people dropping out of the labor market as it is the result of businesses adding jobs. Published February 2, 2012

** FILE ** Social Security checks are printed. (Associated Press)

Retiring later a tough sell in cutting deficit

Suppose Congress could adopt a simple measure that all at once takes a giant step toward taming huge budget deficits and gives a powerful boost to the economy and employment. It would pass in a minute, right? Published January 29, 2012

**FILE** Newly built luxury townhomes are offered for sale Jan. 10, 2012, in Woodland Hills, Calif. (Associated Press)

Fed pushes for government action to help revive housing

Top Federal Reserve officials are prodding the White House and Congress to take more aggressive action to stop the free-fall in the housing market, warning that the U.S. economy will remain sluggish and vulnerable and will not fully recover until housing returns to better health. Published January 18, 2012

Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad arrives Jan. 8, 2012, at the international airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela. Ahmadinejad visited Venezuela as part of his tour aimed at showing off relationships with some of Tehran's close allies, while tensions grow over the country's threats to block oil shipments in retaliation for tighter U.S. sanctions. (Associated Press)

West’s pressure on Iran may squeeze U.S., too

As tensions heat up between Iran and the West, the prospect of a big spike in oil prices to as high as $200 a barrel suddenly looms over the U.S. economy, threatening to overshadow what have been promising signs of gathering strength. Published January 12, 2012

**FILE** Demonstrators outside the White House march in November with a replica of a pipeline during a protest of the planned Keystone XL pipeline that would bring tar sands oil from Canada to Texas. (Associated Press)

Latin oil supplies for U.S. start to dry up

The political and environmental debates swirling around the proposed $7 billion Keystone XL pipeline from Canada to Texas miss a crucial point, energy analysts say: The Canadian oil is needed to replace fast-dwindling production from two other major suppliers of oil — Mexico and Venezuela. Published January 2, 2012