Advanced
in sentence
3466 examples of Advanced in a sentence
The forum’s theme was undoubtedly selected partly in response to fears that technological advances will lead to widespread unemployment, as machines become
advanced
enough to replace humans in performing an increasing number of tasks.
These are not new ideas: the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund, Macron’s predecessors, and economists throughout Europe have
advanced
them often.
According to this view,
advanced
countries have a greater degree of fiscal sophistication.
The novelty of the world since 2008 is that, for the first time in more than a generation,
advanced
countries are experiencing debt crises – and starting to look like poor countries with weak institutions.
More broadly, as the US and Japan recover, cracks are starting to appear in emerging countries that, relative to the
advanced
countries, had enjoyed enviable rates of economic growth since 2008.
But throughout that process, productivity gains have been reinvested to create new innovations, jobs, and industries, driving economic growth as older, less productive jobs are replaced with more
advanced
occupations.
According to recent OECD research as much as one-third of workers in
advanced
economies are either underutilized or unable to handle their current duties.
But this was not the reason Trump
advanced
for withdrawing the US from the Paris accord.
China's diplomatic offensive against Taiwan escalated in early August, when President Hu Jintao telephoned US President George W. Bush to demand a halt to the sale of
advanced
weapons to Taiwan.
In the
advanced
economies of the West, many people in all age groups are effectively left out of formal employment.
The Long and Winding Road to RecoverySAO PAULO – The global economy has bounced back strongly from the nadir of 2009, but growth is still uneven and recent data in key
advanced
economies have been disappointing.
We expect global growth to be around 4.5% in 2011 and 2012, although the two-track recovery will continue, with
advanced
economies chugging along at around 2.5% annual GDP growth, while emerging-market and developing economies motor ahead at an impressive 6.5% rate.
And growth in
advanced
countries is not sufficient to make serious inroads into high unemployment rates, which are imposing high social costs.
This is especially true in the
advanced
economies, where policymakers must address the issues more forcefully.
A key priority for
advanced
economies is to continue the process of fiscal adjustment that most of them initiated this year.
But the two largest
advanced
economies – the US and Japan – have not yet started along this path.
This indicates that
advanced
economies remain committed to promoting global development, despite their own recent problems.
Gaps in income and wealth may be shooting up within individual countries, but per capita income in developing countries is rising much faster than in the
advanced
economies.
They are conversing across disciplines – not only engineering and biology, but also chemistry, physics, mathematics, and computation – and setting new paths for innovation, from initial discovery to the launch of
advanced
applications in the marketplace.
In short, Wilson would endorse a program more like that of Democratic US Senator Elizabeth Warren or Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, featuring an
advanced
social-welfare system that enables broad-based prosperity.
With the exception of Greece,
advanced
economies experienced nothing like a rerun of the Great Depression, which was a very real possibility at the height of the crisis.
A combination of deep recession, global economic dislocations, and effective nationalization of large swathes of the financial sector in the world’s
advanced
economies has deeply unsettled the balance between markets and states.
The new balance that it established between state and market set the stage for an unprecedented period of social cohesion, stability, and prosperity in the
advanced
economies that lasted until the mid-1970’s.
First, Germany has preserved its manufacturing capacity much better than other
advanced
economies have.
Alone among the major
advanced
economies, Germany practices “stakeholder capitalism.”
The free flow of capital from these regions’ SWFs to corporations in the
advanced
countries is crucial in order to balance the global economy and provide liquidity to financial markets, especially given the prospect of another recession in the West.
A similar analysis of many other
advanced
economies suggests that, as in the US, the bottom is quite close but it has not yet been reached.
Moreover, for a number of reasons, growth in the
advanced
economies is likely to remain anemic and well below trend for at least a couple of years.
So the end of this severe global recession will be closer at the end of this year than it is now, the recovery will be anemic rather than robust in
advanced
economies, and there is a rising risk of a double-dip recession.
It is a comprehensive process that would ultimately transform China into a society with the kinds of benefits – opportunities, personal comforts, and public services – found in today’s
advanced
democracies.
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