Aging
in sentence
931 examples of Aging in a sentence
In that sense, too, an
aging
society adds to the responsibilities of the young.
In Germany and Japan,
aging
populations need to save for retirement.
One is Europe's
aging
population.
The question was whether a sovereign would ultimately be able to repay its debt, given specific economic and financial conditions, long-term trends such as the
aging
of the population, and uncertainty about the future course of policy.
Japan’s population is
aging.
Making the Most of Asia’s
Aging
PopulationsSEOUL – Asia is
aging
fast: by 2040, 16% of the region’s population will be older than 65, more than double the 7.8% share in 2015.
But that process is not over, and middle-income countries like China and Vietnam are now facing accelerating population
aging.
The potential of these technologies is not lost on countries such as Germany, Japan, and South Korea, where the workforce is
aging
the fastest, and where automation is being adopted particularly quickly.
Rapid population
aging
no doubt poses a serious threat to Asia’s long-term economic prospects.
With the right policies, Asian countries can mitigate the risks of population
aging
and harness their “silver dividend” to become more productive, resilient, and dynamic than ever.
With its shrinking and
aging
population, Germany needs more young, motivated people to keep its economy thriving – a need that refugees can fill.
At the moment, it makes more sense to invest the additional savings abroad, because population
aging
in Germany limits the potential for useful investment at home, and other markets are growing faster.
But China has identified automation as a strategic priority, and is now developing its own robotics industry in order to stay ahead of its rising labor costs and
aging
population.
The regime is
aging
and ailing, and is perceived by the population as being on life support.
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.
The US is a net debtor with an
aging
population, unfunded entitlement spending on social security and health care, an anemic economic recovery, and risks of continued monetization of the fiscal deficit.
Japan is
aging
even faster, and economic stagnation is reducing domestic savings, while the public debt is approaching 200% of GDP.
Its population is
aging
more rapidly than most.
Economists regard migration as a movement of individuals in search of a better life and call for more immigration to offset population aging, or to provide workers to do the “dirty jobs.”
They found that, when isolated from
aging
cells – whether from human or cow blood, or from genetically engineered sources – free hemoglobin can be rejuvenated, chemically stabilized, and re-infused as a blood “substitute” that can carry oxygen as effectively as red blood cells, but for a much shorter time.
Researchers (including at my laboratory) have investigated how the body naturally handles the occasional release of hemoglobin from
aging
red blood cells and from cells affected by blood diseases, such as hemolytic anemia.
Aging
rails, tired coaches, old-fashioned signals, and level crossings dating back to the nineteenth century combine with human error to take dozens of lives every year.
Earlier this year, the Congressional Budget Office warned that the potential US growth rate has declined as a result of years of subpar investment rates, the
aging
of the population, and smaller productivity gains.
Indeed, in virtually all advanced economies, high levels of inequality, strains on the middle class, and
aging
populations will fuel political strife in a context of unemployment and scarce fiscal resources.
Aging
general secretaries were dropping like flies.
In recent interviews, Alexievich has said she is working on two more books – one about love, the other about
aging.
Just as Europe’s population is
aging
and will be shrinking, that of much of the developing world is young and growing.
Moreover, given the massive increase in migration that would be needed to offset the impact of population
aging
in Europe, this would be only a partial solution at best.
And with higher life expectancy, raising the retirement age is a further sensible way to address the negative effects of an
aging
population.
It is measured in “net” terms to strip out the depreciation associated with
aging
or obsolescent capacity.
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