Boosting
in sentence
674 examples of Boosting in a sentence
What’s more, access to education can reduce child marriage, child labor, exploitative and dangerous work, and teenage pregnancy, while
boosting
students’ confidence, self-esteem, and job prospects.
John Kufuor, Ghana’s president from 2001 to 2009, exemplified such leadership,
boosting
investment in agricultural research, farmer education, and infrastructure projects, such as roads, warehouses, and cold storage.
But, recognizing the impending disaster, Greece would genuinely commit itself to the structural reforms that are in its own long-term interests:
boosting
the labor market’s flexibility, selling state-owned enterprises that most other European countries have already placed in private hands, and spending less on public-sector bureaucracy.
Even as Clinton was cautioning Indian officials about contacts with Iran (demanding, in particular, a reduction in imports of Iranian oil), India was hosting a high-level Iranian trade mission aimed at
boosting
bilateral economic ties.
And even if Macri had not managed to win Argentina’s presidency, his opponent Daniel Scioli – who served as Vice President under Néstor Kirchner, but represents a more moderate Peronism – probably would have had to implement pragmatic policies aimed at
boosting
market confidence.
Its current-account deficit remains large, and monetary policy has been confusing, as the objective of
boosting
competitiveness and growth clashes with the need to control inflation and avoid excessive credit expansion.
In sum, among advanced economies, the US is in the best relative shape, followed by Japan, where Abenomics is
boosting
confidence.
When it comes to oil, for example, shale gas, tight oil, liquefied natural gas, and increasingly competitive solar and wind energy are
boosting
energy supply, even as a decade of high prices has spurred conservation and reduced demand.
When societies are not burdened by disease, they can focus on
boosting
productivity, consumption, and trade.
In the future, as in the past, technological change is likely to fuel productivity gains and income growth,
boosting
demand for labor.
If workforces are stagnating or shrinking and growth is subdued, why spend on
boosting
output?
More than 60% of the world’s obese people live in developing countries, where rapid industrialization and urbanization are
boosting
incomes and therefore calorie intake.
Meanwhile, China’s domestic political system is being shaken up by President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign – an effort that is essential to
boosting
the government’s accountability and legitimacy as it pursues deep systemic reforms.
But rising wages – partly the result of mandated minimum-wage increases in some regions – are
boosting
household incomes, and there is already some evidence that the downward trend in consumption’s share of GDP has reversed.
Japan must either squeeze more out of its existing workforce by
boosting
productivity, or uncover new sources of demand at home or abroad.
At home, that could mean adding workers, either by
boosting
female participation in the work force, which, at 63%, is among the lowest in the developed world, or relaxing immigration restrictions.
Meanwhile, emerging markets and developing economies provided almost a mirror image of this trend, raising their investment and
boosting
the supply of goods to the rest of the world at the cost of consumption in their own economies.
At the same time, it is widely acknowledged (except by most editors and journalists) that a great deal of media intrusion is simply an abuse of press freedom, with the sole aim of
boosting
circulation by feeding public prurience.
For the last three years, Russia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine have been economically successful, with Russia and Ukraine
boosting
average annual economic growth rates of 6% and Kazakhstan around 11%.Sound market-based thinking has driven their domestic economic policies.
In some countries, broadly shared restraint on income and wage growth seems to have been important to restoring competitiveness and
boosting
potential output.
The tight labor market and rising wages are inducing some individuals who had stopped looking for work to return to the labor force,
boosting
the participation rate.
Indeed, as part of the government’s “going global” policy, Chinese companies are offered major incentives and rewards for bagging overseas contracts and
boosting
exports.
Infrastructure for a Sustainable FutureWASHINGTON, DC – Infrastructure is a powerful driver of economic growth and inclusive development, capable of
boosting
aggregate demand today and laying the foundations for future growth.
Free trade enables countries to capitalize on their comparative advantages,
boosting
all participants’ economic performance and prospects.
Social and economic inclusion lie at the heart of the World Bank Group’s goals of eliminating extreme poverty and
boosting
shared prosperity.
While this approach has succeeded in
boosting
financial markets, it has failed to cure bruised and battered developed economies, which remain mired in subpar recoveries and plagued with deflationary risks.
On the demand side, South Korea must begin by
boosting
household expenditure.
The wave of industrialization and urbanization that is
boosting
the incomes of millions of people in emerging economies has not run its course.
The plan now is to implement supply-side structural reforms aimed at
boosting
productivity and improving the functioning of both the market and the state.
The logic of this two-pronged strategy is that subsidies are hopeless at creating productivity growth, but good at
boosting
low-end jobs and pay.
Back
Related words
Growth
Demand
Economic
Would
Investment
Countries
Aimed
Their
Productivity
While
Thereby
Economy
Policies
Global
Which
Domestic
Policy
Reducing
Employment
Economies