Economic article analysis

 Economic article analysis, please make two pages as one document, so there are three documents in total. Double space, times new roman, 12 font. Here are three articles you should use: First Article: WSJ. Aug. 30, 2018 Trump’s Nafta Rewrite Holds Promise for Labor Unions By Josh Zumbrun Second Article: WSJ Sept 11,th 2018Steelworkers Demand Higher Pay as Tariffs Lift Profits By Bob Tita Third Article: WSJ Oct 3rd, 2018Fed Chari Powell Sees “Remarkably Positive Set of Economic Circumstances”By Kate Davidson and Sarah Chaney or you can also use these links: https://www.wsj.com/articles/trumps-nafta-rewrite-holds-promise-for-labor-unions-1535653247 https://www.wsj.com/articles/steel-workers-demand-higher-pay-raises-as-tariffs-lift-profits-1536668815 https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-chair-powell-sees-remarkably-positive-set-of-economic-circumstances-1538600083 And here is the specific prompt, please check it carefully: The selected news article on which you will write your analysis will be announced on your class canvas page under “announcement.” The copy of the article will also be posted on the class bulletin board located inside the faculty office area in C352 (see glassed bulletin board immediately outside of suite B in C352) under the heading “MACROECONOMICS/MICROECONOMICS.” YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR DOWNLOADING THE ARTICLE FROM THE WEB (some news articles are downloadable free of charge, others are available through the PCC library website via “database/national news papers expanded (pro quest).” For EACH of the selected news article, you will write a 1 to 2 page economic analysis that includes: a MAXIMUM of 1 paragraph summarizing the news article (worth 25% of the grade) and a MINIMUM of 2 paragraphs (each worth 25% of the grade) theoretically analyzing the article. The latter 2 paragraphs should include graphs (which includes those you learned in macroeconomics (econ 1A—such PPC, D-S, AD-AS, Philip’s Curve, Exp-Y, etc.) as well as during the course of this semester (in econ 1B—such as utility, price elasticity of D-S, cost/demand/marginal revenue curves of various market structures, etc.) and mathematical analyses when appropriate (worth 25% of the grade). To be eligible for extra credit, your analysis must be typed (including your graphs). The analysis is due at the beginning of class on the day as stated on the tentative schedule. After the grace period of 15 minutes, late submissions will lose 10% for every 10 minutes.