Newstral
Article
South China Morning Post on 2020-08-11 02:40
Singapore recession worse than thought as GDP falls 13.2 per cent in second quarter
Related news
- SCoronavirus: Singapore pairs citizens with jobs and training amid record recession as GDP falls 13.2 per cent in Q2scmp.com
- Singapore GDP expected to grow from 3-5 per cent this year amid post-pandemic recoverySouth China Morning Post
- Singapore is heading for a recessionCNN
- Singapore eases monetary policy as deep recession loomsSouth China Morning Post
- Singapore fends off recession as economy grows in third quarterSouth China Morning Post
- SSingapore posts surprise economic growth in first quarter, with GDP expanding 0.2 per cent year on yearscmp.com
- SCoronavirus: Singapore exits pandemic-induced recession as economy grows 1.3 per centscmp.com
- IUSD/SGD forecast after the strong Singapore GDP upgradeinvezz.com
- Singapore downgrades growth outlook as Q2 GDP misses forecastsAl Jazeera
- IUSD/SGD bearish trend intact after strong Singapore GDP datainvezz.com
- Singapore GDP forecast gets a bump from Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour concertsSouth China Morning Post
- Singapore economy: gradual recovery seen as fourth quarter GDP shrinks less than expectedSouth China Morning Post
- Australian economy heads for first recession in 29 years after coronavirus caused GDP to drop 0.3 per cent last quarterSouth China Morning Post
- FSingapore 3Q GDP revised higherft.com
- Singapore braces for recession after economy shrinks more than expected in first quarterSouth China Morning Post
- Singapore forecasts growth as low as 0.5 per cent next year as global pressures mountSouth China Morning Post
- SSingapore sees third straight quarterly GDP contraction, but signs point to recoveryscmp.com
- Singapore reports lowest GDP growth in two years as trade ministry warns manufacturers may be vulnerableSouth China Morning Post
- Singapore fourth quarter GDP growth revised sharply higher as manufacturing surgesmetro.us
- SCoronavirus: economic impact of Covid-19 already worse than Sars, says Singapore PMscmp.com