Advanced
in sentence
3466 examples of Advanced in a sentence
An invasion of short-term capital flows fleeing the slow-growth, low-interest-rate
advanced
countries.
Because educational attainment is considered a measure of merit, officials scramble to obtain
advanced
degrees in order to gain an advantage in the competition for power.
A serious discussion of global capital-account regulations would benefit both
advanced
and emerging-market economies.
The effectiveness of monetary expansion could be enhanced in
advanced
countries by reducing the leakages generated by the carry trade and other short-term capital outflows.
Indeed, the world will be characterized for several years by the asymmetry generated by
advanced
countries’ weakness and emerging economies’ strength, which calls for asymmetry in these two groups of countries’ monetary policies.
The market for “clean meat” is nascent but burgeoning, and the public response has been overwhelmingly positive to some of the more
advanced
products on the market.
More than 700 graduates have attended secondary school, and more than 40 alumni are pursuing
advanced
degrees at universities around the world.
No surprise there: we face another year in which global growth will average about 3%, but with a multi-speed recovery – a sub-par, below-trend annual rate of 1% in the
advanced
economies, and close-to-trend rates of 5% in emerging markets.
Painful deleveraging – less spending and more saving to reduce debt and leverage – remains ongoing in most
advanced
economies, which implies slow economic growth.
But fiscal austerity will envelop most
advanced
economies this year, rather than just the eurozone periphery and the United Kingdom.
Indeed, austerity is spreading to the core of the eurozone, the United States, and other
advanced
economies (with the exception of Japan).
Given synchronized fiscal retrenchment in most
advanced
economies, another year of mediocre growth could give way to outright contraction in some countries.
With growth anemic in most
advanced
economies, the rally in risky assets that began in the second half of 2012 has not been driven by improved fundamentals, but rather by fresh rounds of unconventional monetary policy.
Most major
advanced
economies’ central banks – the European Central Bank, the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, and the Swiss National Bank – have engaged in some form of quantitative easing, and they are now likely to be joined by the Bank of Japan, which is being pushed toward more unconventional policies by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s new government.
The fear premium in oil markets may significantly rise and increase oil prices by 20%, leading to negative growth effects in the US, Europe, Japan, China, India and all other
advanced
economies and emerging markets that are net oil importers.
Building a Progressive InternationalATHENS – Politics in the
advanced
economies of the West is in the throes of a political shakeup unseen since the 1930s.
The Great Deflation poses a great question: can humanity design and implement a new, technologically advanced, “green” Bretton Woods – a system that makes our planet ecologically and economically sustainable – without the mass pain and destruction preceding the original Bretton Woods?
After all, the crisis had originated in the
advanced
economies, which are accustomed to managing business cycles, rather than in the emerging-market countries, where structural and secular forces dominate.
But some observers already saw signs that this shock would prove more consequential, with the
advanced
economies finding themselves locked into a frustrating and unusual long-term low-growth trajectory.
Few were ready to admit that the
advanced
economies had bet the farm on the wrong growth model, much less that they should look to the emerging economies for insight into structural impediments to growth, including debt overhangs and excessive inequalities.
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde warned in October 2014 that the
advanced
economies were facing a “new mediocre.”
But, despite the fact that European scientific research is among the most
advanced
in the world, Europe lags behind its global competitors in its ability to bring these innovations to the market.
In other words, through a conscious effort, backed by public funds, we can steer the development of the
advanced
technologies needed to ensure humanity’s safety and wellbeing.
But the
advanced
economies’ room for fiscal maneuver is more limited than it was in 2007-2008, and America’s political gridlock has deepened, all but ruling out further stimulus through budgetary channels.
In particular, expansionary monetary policies in the US (indeed, in all
advanced
countries) are generating high risks for emerging economies.
Such support has, in fact, become extensive, both in
advanced
and emerging economies.
But the G-20’s effort to create parity in these institutions between the
advanced
economies and the emerging and transition countries has ground to a halt.
Education in the Age of AutomationSEOUL – As digital technologies and automation have advanced, fears about workers’ futures have increased.
The challenge today lies in the fact that the production and use of increasingly
advanced
technologies demand new, often higher-level skills, which cannot simply be picked up on the job.
The recent rise in income inequality in China and other East Asian economies, for example, reflects the widening gap between those who are able to adopt
advanced
technologies and those who aren’t.
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