Decade
in sentence
4218 examples of Decade in a sentence
A
decade
later, they fought back, defeated Chiang Kaishek, and launched Mao’s New China.
There is one positive note in this dismal picture: the sources of global growth today are more diverse than they were a
decade
ago.
For a European who has been deeply troubled and saddened by America’s evolution in the last decade, Obama, of all the declared presidential candidates, seems to come closest to incarnating such an America.
In fact, over the past decade, the government has slashed budgets at several top health agencies, including the CDC, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and state and local health departments.
Its budget has stagnated for most of the past decade, except for years when it was dramatically reduced, such as in 2013.
Fortunately, the Ebola outbreak is unlikely to expose Americans fully to the poor fiscal choices of the past
decade.
Fortunately, President Barack Obama resisted, and instead negotiated a treaty between Iran and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council (plus Germany) that blocks Iran’s path to nuclear weapons for a
decade
or more, creating space for further confidence-building measures on both sides.
The fact is that major budget cutting will happen over the next
decade.
Over the past decade, the corporate-bond market has surged as banks have restructured and repaired their balance sheets.
It will push more of Italy’s top talent abroad, exacerbating a trend that has plagued the country for more than a
decade.
Ireland’s impressive recovery from the financial crisis a
decade
ago would have not been possible without the support, recommendations, and engagement of its diaspora.
In the 1980’s, Latin America suffered a lost decade; a similar fate now awaits Europe.
A
decade
ago, the US seemed hopelessly dependent on imported energy.
Now the shale revolution has transformed it from an energy importer to an exporter, and North America may be self-sufficient in the coming
decade
at the same time that China is becoming more dependent on energy imports.
Moreover, it was the
decade
when Internet access went global – from 360 million people in 2000 to more than two billion people today.
That is the most important lesson of the post-9/11
decade.
Latin America was stuck in its own lost
decade
after the debt crisis at the start of the 1980’s.
The rest of the
decade
was punctuated by the Mexican peso crisis of 1994, the East Asian crisis of 1997-98, and troubles in Brazil, Argentina, Turkey, and elsewhere, and the new millennium began with the collapse of the dot-com bubble in 2000 and the economic fallout from the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
With the costs of ousting Saddam Hussein and occupying Iraq likely to run at anywhere from $100 to $600 billion over the next decade, the US will want to "internationalize" Iraq's reconstruction.
So central banks embraced measures that didn’t even exist in their policy toolkit a
decade
ago.
As a result, unconventional monetary policies – entrenched now for almost a
decade
– have themselves become conventional.
And if current conditions in the advanced economies remain entrenched a
decade
from now, helicopter drops, debt monetization, and taxation of cash may turn out to be the new QE, CE, FG, ZIRP, and NIRP.
By the end of the decade, 706 industrial plants were destroyed.
The Death of King FahadSaudi Arabia’s
decade
long royal death watch is over.
Little has changed since Italian economists Alberto Alesina and Francesco Giavazzi noted, nearly a
decade
ago, that, “Without serious, deep, and comprehensive reforms, Europe will inexorably decline, both economically and politically.”
The point is that, despite the excesses of 1999-2000, the economic difficulties of the last two years, and the tendency to think of the technology boom of the 1990's as mere hype, the US underwent deep structural changes in its economy during that
decade.
This kind of autopilot can work in normal times; indeed, it dominated the Western leaders’ approach to global affairs for much of the last
decade
and a half.
The real problem in Greece is no longer the fiscal deficit, but a combination of deposit flight and continuing excessive consumption in the private sector, which for more than a
decade
now has been accustomed to spending much more than it earns.
In less than a decade, it will be the huge world market, rather than national markets, that allocates capital, finance, and skilled labor.
It is estimated that 600 million jobs worldwide will need to be created over the next
decade
to make up for jobs lost in the recent economic crisis.
Back
Next
Related words
Growth
After
Which
Global
Economic
Countries
Would
During
Crisis
Their
About
World
Economy
First
Years
Financial
Could
Later
There
Country