Advanced
in sentence
3466 examples of Advanced in a sentence
The lesson is also apparent in the economic history of the twentieth century, when – especially in the decades following the Great Depression – most of today’s
advanced
industrialized countries underwent a sustained process of institutional deepening that broadened the base and strengthened the resilience of their economies.
Infected humans will eventually hallucinate, become aggressive, and even fear water in the
advanced
stages of the disease.
Discovering the solution required the development of
advanced
theoretical techniques.
And the most fundamental of those issues is whether American grievances against China – shared by many of the
advanced
economies – are justified.
But some pushback conceivably could be warranted if the
advanced
economies – which have already created an informal contact group of “China losers,” including representatives of the European Union, Japan, and the United States – are right that China has been engaging in unfair trading practices.
Although China remains far less open to foreign direct investment than most
advanced
economies, the OECD’s composite indicator shows that there has been continuous, albeit sluggish, improvement.
In fact, per capita GDP – and thus productivity – in a number of Chinese provinces with a combined population of over 100 million is similar to that of
advanced
countries (around $30,000 per capita at purchasing power parity).
Twenty years of the most
advanced
thinking for mathematical algorithms came from a Soviet empire starved of computing power.
Moreover, Italy now has one of the youngest governments among
advanced
countries (only France does better).
In last year’s Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, Italy was ranked 61st, trailing all other
advanced
economies.
But the limited supply of higher-skill jobs in Italy, compared to other
advanced
EU countries, also affects migrant flows.
Significantly, recent research by the Bank for International Settlements has found that a global output gap of about 1% – precisely the outcome for all
advanced
economies over the past five years – reduces inflation by 0.9%.
The Risky RichNEW YORK – Today’s swollen fiscal deficits and public debt are fueling concerns about sovereign risk in many
advanced
economies.
As a result, sovereign risk today is a greater problem in
advanced
economies than in most emerging-market economies.
Indeed, rating-agency downgrades, a widening of sovereign spreads, and failed public-debt auctions in countries like the United Kingdom, Greece, Ireland, and Spain provided a stark reminder last year that unless
advanced
economies begin to put their fiscal houses in order, investors, bond-market vigilantes, and rating agencies may turn from friend to foe.
In the future, a weak economic recovery and an aging population are likely to increase the debt burden of many
advanced
economies, including the United States, the UK, Japan, and several euro-zone countries.
More ominously, monetization of these fiscal deficits is becoming a pattern in many
advanced
economies, as central banks have started to swell the monetary base via massive purchases of short- and long-term government paper.
These lessons apply equally to
advanced
economies, which also suffer from rising inequality and subtle forms of corruption.
Of course, the West’s sense of invincibility was already under siege at home, exemplified in the proliferating political challenges to the establishment elites who have
advanced
the post-Cold War strategic agenda.
Privatization advanced, nationalists were constrained, relations with our big Hungarian minority improved, the country stood with the West during the Kosovo war.
Turkey’s Hot-Money ProblemNEW YORK – The ongoing financial volatility in emerging economies is fueling debate about whether the so-called “Fragile Five” – Brazil, India, Indonesia, South Africa, and Turkey – should be viewed as victims of
advanced
countries’ monetary policies or victims of their own excessive integration into global financial markets.
With
advanced
economies struggling to avoid financial collapse, escape recession, reduce unemployment, and restore growth, central banks are being called upon to address, sometimes simultaneously, growing imbalances.
If Putin is serious about diversifying and strengthening Russia’s commodities-based economy, thereby improving the lives of his country’s people, he must attract
advanced
technologies and foreign investment, especially from the West.
But there are promising signs that, over time, the
advanced
countries’ difficulties will trigger a healthy, if belated, shift in Asia’s development strategy, with China leading the way.
In late 2012, at the peak of the post-crisis austerity debate,
advanced
economies were in the midst of a multi-year tightening equivalent to more than one percentage point of GDP annually, according to cyclically-adjusted primary balance data from the International Monetary Fund.
The output gap in
advanced
economies has all but disappeared, inflation is picking up, and world economic growth is forecast to be its strongest since 2010.
In 2013, Japan was the only
advanced
economy to loosen fiscal policy.
Most observers would agree that government debt levels are uncomfortably high in many
advanced
economies, so it would be prudent for policymakers to discuss strategies for bringing them down.
At the G20’s recent summit in Hangzhou, China – its tenth since the 2008 global financial crisis – member governments once again pledged to invest in infrastructure in
advanced
economies to boost growth, and in the developing world to fight poverty.
Today, Russian President Vladimir Putin has
advanced
an even more ambitious goal: “a common market stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific.”
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