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Patrice Hill

Patrice Hill was a staff writer for The Washington Times.

Articles by Patrice Hill

**FILE** Delegates arrive Nov. 4, 2011, for the day's first working session at the G20 summit in Cannes. (Associated Press)

U.S. no longer a leader of fiscal rescue

The U.S. has stayed uncharacteristically distant as European nations struggle with their long-running debt crisis, creating an opening for big emerging nations such as China and Brazil to move to center stage in world economic affairs. Published December 15, 2011

British Prime Minister David Cameron arrives for an EU summit in Brussels on Thursday. During a two-day summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy will try to build support for their plan for eurozone nations to submit their national budgets to much greater scrutiny. (Associated Press)

Future of eurozone looks bleak to some

It still seems unthinkable to most Europeans, but a growing number of outside analysts and investors believe the eurozone is headed toward a breakup as fast-moving market turmoil and a looming recession threaten to overwhelm the slow-motion response of European leaders. Published December 8, 2011

French President Nicolas Sarkozy waves goodbye to German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday as she leaves the Elysee Palace after their meeting in Paris. The two leaders discussed a cohesive plan to help save the euro through stricter oversight of government budgets. The warning by Standard & Poor's of a possible credit downgrade of European nations over the debt crisis came after U.S. financial markets closed Monday. (Associated Press)

France, Germany face S&P downgrade

The long-running debt crisis in Europe intensified and broadened dramatically Monday as a top Wall Street credit agency warned Germany, France and a handful of other previously stable Northern European countries that they are in danger of losing their top ratings as they get drawn ever more deeply into the financial maelstrom. Published December 5, 2011

** FILE ** In this Nov. 14, 2011, file photo, job seekers line up to speak to recruiters during a career expo in Las Colinas, Texas. (AP Photo/LM Otero, File)

U.S. jobless rate fell to 8.6 percent in Nov.

The nation's unemployment rate plummeted dramatically to 8.6 percent last month, after hovering around 9 percent for much of the year, as the pace of job growth quickened, the Labor Department reported Friday morning. Published December 2, 2011

Customers shop at a Best Buy store in Burbank, Calif., on Friday. This year's Black Friday rush was particularly lucrative for electronics dealers such as Best Buy, many of whom lured shoppers as early as Thanksgiving Day by offering midnight sales on deeply discounted items such as flat-screen televisions, smart phones and video games. (Associated Press)

Shoppers give retailers early Christmas gift

The Christmas shopping season started with a bang and the consumer mood is brightening at a critical time during the month that brings a quarter of the year's retail sales in the U.S. Published November 29, 2011

Sen. John Kerry, Massachusetts Democrat, emerges from a closed-door meeting with fellow Democratic members of the supercommittee at the Capitol on Nov. 16, 2011. (Associated Press)

No budget deal just might be good news for U.S. deficit

The reaction to the supercommittee's epic failure this week to address the spiraling debt has been surprisingly muted on Wall Street and Main Street, in part because astute observers there have concluded that Congress may accomplish more by doing nothing when it comes to the deficit. Published November 24, 2011

** FILE ** The Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction meets on Capitol Hill last month. Supercommittee members (from left) are Rep. Fred Upton, Rep. Xavier Becerra, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, Sen. Patty Murray, Sen. Jon Kyl, Sen. Max Baucus, Sen. Rob Portman, Sen. John F. Kerry and Sen. Patrick J. Toomey. (Associated Press)

U.S. pols risk fate of Europe’s leaders in debt mess

Legislators in Washington who are tempted to punt yet again this fall and not take the painful medicine needed to tame the government's spiraling debt might want to consider the fates of European political leaders who did the same thing in years past. Published November 17, 2011

Italy's new premier-designate Mario Monti addresses the media at the Senate in Rome on Nov. 14, 2011. (Associated Press)

Europe’s woes pall U.S. economic rebound

Just as the outlook for the U.S. economy finally brightened in recent weeks, the darkening clouds in Europe threaten to overshadow budding signs of growth. Published November 14, 2011

Protesters came with signs depicting Li Ka-shing, Hong Kong's richest man, to vent their anger about skyrocketing property prices and government policies on July 1, the 14th anniversary of the former British colony's return to Chinese rule. (Associated Press)

China mocks U.S. political model

Chinese political and business leaders are increasingly triumphant after two decades of rapid economic growth that lifted unprecedented millions of people out of poverty and turned the nation into an economic superpower, saying their success proves its political and economic system is superior to the Western model. Published November 9, 2011

THE FUTURE IS HERE: Machines operate on one of China's first 0.5mm LCD glass-product lines at Chengdu COE Technology Co. in Chengdu, China. China is pushing to develop its high-tech industry. (Associated Press)

Beijing ups R&D competition with U.S.

Stepping up its long-running struggle with the United States over access to technology, China this year embarked on a campaign to target advanced industries such as aerospace, medicine and information technology for its next stage of development. Published November 8, 2011

China is using every means available to fill the burgeoning demand for electricity around the nation — such as this wind farm south of Urumqi city in Xinjiang, China — as well as to add to its portfolio of exports to the West. (Associated Press)

China moves, haltingly, to clean up environmental mess

After two decades of nonstop development that devastated the environment in many areas, Chinese leaders now say they want to clean up and restore the nation's fabled rivers and ancient lands. Published November 7, 2011

A family rests in its new apartment home after relocating from farmlands in northern China. While trying to protect farmland from development amid a housing boom, officials are going after the land under farmers' homes. (Associated Press)

China’s upwardly mobile face housing squeeze

Cao Sheng, a young professional living in the bustling port city of Ningbo, would like to move to a larger apartment so she and her husband can start a family. But with housing prices skyrocketing across China, she doubts they will be able to afford one any time soon. Published November 7, 2011

A salesman (center left) and a visitor (center right) check out a Volkswagen CrossGolf at an import car expo in Beijing on Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

China explores new paths to prosperity

China's economy is struggling for a second time in four years to avoid being dragged under by a receding tide of ebbing growth and financial crises elsewhere in the world. Published November 6, 2011

Unemployment dips to 9 percent in Oct.

The nation's unemployment rate fell slightly to 9 percent last month as businesses added another 80,000 jobs, the Labor Department reported Friday morning. Published November 4, 2011

Job growth picks up in September

Job growth picked up to 103,000 last month, defying fears of a gathering slowdown in the economy, while the unemployment rate held steady at 9.1 percent, the Labor Department reported Friday morning. Published October 7, 2011

Listless consumers put the brakes on August spending

The foundering economy has left Americans consumers listless and frustrated with many unwilling to splurge at the malls and unable to take advantage of the lowest mortgage rates on record to buy a house or improve their finances. Published September 14, 2011

U.S. exports are up, but jobs don’t follow

Exports have been a rare strength and engine of growth in the U.S. economic recovery, aided by a big push from the Obama White House — but despite the positive signs, the sector has not proven to be the plentiful source of new jobs that many supporters had hoped. Published September 13, 2011

Businesses cite ‘poor sales’ as top reason for lack of hiring

The economy last month offered up no new jobs in celebration of Labor Day and appears in danger of slipping back into recession despite massive efforts by Congress and the Federal Reserve in the past three years to keep it afloat. Published September 4, 2011

Job growth, unemployment stall in August

Job growth ground to a halt last month in the strongest evidence to date that businesses were hit as hard as consumers by a sharp loss of confidence during the month spawned by Washington's debt crisis and severe turmoil in the world's financial markets. Published September 2, 2011