Demographic
in sentence
773 examples of Demographic in a sentence
Geopolitical, demographic, and economic forces are relentlessly reshaping labor markets.
In fact, the election had several salutary effects – beyond showing that unbridled corporate spending could not buy an election, and that
demographic
changes in the United States may doom Republican extremism.
Needless to say,
demographic
transitions, commodity constraints, and geopolitical uncertainties complicate all of this.
First, low interest rates do not necessarily indicate that advanced economies are mired in a low-growth trap as a consequence of adverse
demographic
trends and slow productivity growth.
While Japan’s
demographic
decline poses challenges, it may also imply some advantages: and Japan’s debts are far more sustainable than they appear.
Europe, while afraid of illegal migration, needs foreign labor for its own
demographic
reasons – not least young engineers, technical staff, doctors, and health-care workers.
At long last, these countries’
demographic
wealth would be used to meet their development needs.
With its current levels of immigration, America is one of the few developed countries that may avoid
demographic
decline and keep its share of world population, but this might change if reactions to terrorist events or public xenophobia closed the borders.
Environmental, demographic, and economic pressures aggravate water scarcity, and the resulting unemployment and insecurity fuels social unrest, political turmoil, and extremism.
And both face serious
demographic
problems, given shrinking and aging populations, as well as the challenge of Asia’s rising superpowers.
Lebanon’s Sunnis and Shiites – the country’s two most powerful communities, owing mostly to their
demographic
weight and the backing they enjoy from elsewhere in the region – are nowhere near the point of mutual violence, but there has been palpable political tension recently.
Even though the region was already being transformed by
demographic
changes, including rapid population growth, urbanization, and a spike in unemployed, university-educated young adults, the eruption of protests took many Middle Eastern and North African countries by surprise.
Unless it finds a way to improve, the country's
demographic
profile could become a burden rather than a benefit.
Moreover, Russia’s
demographic
crisis continues, sustained by poor public health and inadequate investment in a social safety net.
The Real
Demographic
ChallengeLONDON – The United Nations’ latest population projections suggest that Japan’s population could fall from 127 million today to 83 million by 2100, with 35% of the population then over 65 years old.
East Asia has gained a huge
demographic
dividend from rapid fertility declines: in much of Africa and the Middle East, the dividend is still missing.
The
demographic
challenges facing advanced economies are slight in comparison.
Ensuring that women are educated and free is by far the most important
demographic
challenge facing the world today.
Roughly the size of California, Japan will never have the geographical or
demographic
scale of China or the US.
Moreover, China will face increasingly adverse
demographic
conditions.
Worse still, the
demographic
threat is being heightened by the way most countries finance their public pension schemes.
It is illogical to continue subsidizing a compulsory exit from the labor force while simultaneously trying to safeguard public retirement systems in the face of tremendous
demographic
challenges.
Universal secondary education, especially for girls, is transformative for societies attempting to escape poverty, because education changes the
demographic
dynamics of the country as well.
This is obvious for fertility, which is determined by deeper social and
demographic
trends that cannot really be influenced by government action.
The Challenging BillionsCAMBRIDGE – The world is in the midst of the greatest
demographic
upheaval in human history.
For example, the East Asian “Tigers” cut their birth rates precipitously in the 1970’s and 1980’s, and used the resulting
demographic
breathing room to stunning advantage through judicious education and health policies, sound macroeconomic management, and careful regional and global economic engagement.
From a purely
demographic
perspective, the advanced economies’ productive capacity has reached a plateau of slightly more than two working-age people per dependent.
But that indicator is projected to plummet to 1.36 by 2050, posing a threat to the sizable
demographic
dividend that these countries have enjoyed in recent decades.
Although the issues immediately confronting developing countries are different from those facing the rich countries, in our globalized world,
demographic
challenges anywhere are
demographic
challenges everywhere.
There is good reason to fear much more serious long-term consequences of the rise in the budget deficit, owing to two key issues of timing – one cyclical and the other
demographic.
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