The evidence provided by a wide range of high-authority sources overwhelmingly supports the statement. Multiple primary U.S. government sources, including the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and the St. Louis Federal Reserve, publish explicit, forward-looking release schedules. These schedules list the precise dates and times for major economic reports like GDP and Personal Income. For example, one source shows a specific release scheduled for 'Thursday, January 22, 2026'. Since specific dates fall within specific weeks, the core of the statement is confirmed by these official bodies.Furthermore, numerous reputable financial and economic analysis firms like Morningstar, Moody's Analytics, Briefing.com, and Trading Economics aggregate this official data into user-friendly 'weekly' calendars. The existence of a 'Weekly Markets Planner' and calendars that can be filtered 'by week' demonstrates that viewing and planning around these scheduled releases on a weekly basis is standard industry practice. The Moody's 'U.S. Weekly Highlights and Preview' further reinforces this by analyzing the economic calendar for the upcoming week. There is no contradictory evidence among the sources. All evidence points to a well-established, public, and predictable system where economic reports are scheduled for release on specific days, which are then commonly organized and viewed within the context of a specific week.