Demographic
in sentence
773 examples of Demographic in a sentence
The first trend is
demographic.
By contrast, those who predict generally high real interest rates over the next generation point to low savings rates in the US, high spending driven by
demographic
burdens in Europe, and feckless governments running chronic deficits and unsustainable fiscal policies.
Demographic
data don’t capture the on-the-ground reality of asylum systems on the brink of collapse or economies struggling to provide housing and employment.
Without any such disruption, however,
demographic
trends suggest that migration from Latin America to the US will continue to decline steadily.
Demographic
trends are threatening to turn the labor surplus that helped drive China’s rapid growth over the last few decades into a labor shortage at an unprecedented pace.
But, in order to harness this
demographic
dividend, they must be given the skills and opportunities to become productive citizens.
Moreover, Russia’s rapid
demographic
decline and enormous modernization deficit imply the need for a joint future with Europe.
With its economic, military, and
demographic
heft – China generates considerable unease in Russia.
Consider the
demographic
situation in eastern Siberia, where six million Russians live across the border from up to 120 million Chinese.
The good news is that wages are already growing faster than GDP – a trend that is likely to continue, as
demographic
change restricts the supply of new labor.
Some attribute relatively slow growth to
demographic
factors, which have reduced the labor force, as well as to weak productivity levels, which have been low.
It still has one of the lowest rates of public and private investment among OECD countries, and will be hit harder than most by a dramatic
demographic
shift over the next decade.
Brazil has risen to become the world’s seventh-largest economy, propelled by a commodities boom, a
demographic
dividend, and rising consumption.
Most of today’s (and tomorrow’s)
demographic
growth is in Africa, where it doesn’t drive global productivity to the extent that it does elsewhere.
The new paper opens a different path: it suggests revising and harmonizing national accounting, in order to gauge better the vulnerability of eurozone members’ public finances; ensuring that banks’ creditors, rather than governments, pay when crisis strikes; decentralizing fiscal discipline by requiring each country to adopt a constitutional rule on the stability of the debt ratio; and curbing countries’ contingent liabilities by adjusting pension systems to
demographic
ageing.
As Europe’s largest ethnic minority, Roma inside the EU comprise the youngest and fastest-growing
demographic
segment of the population.
And China’s recently announced urbanization strategy should ensure that cities’
demographic
structure supports intrinsic demand.
Yet the recent backlash against globalization – triggered not only by economic insecurity and inequality, but also by fears of social and
demographic
change – has brought a resurgence of old-fashioned ethnic nationalism.
These
demographic
shifts will further revolutionize the labor market, social-security systems, economic development, and the world of employment.
Over the longer term, it means awareness of structural risks like high sovereign debt,
demographic
shifts, and natural-resource scarcity.
What advanced societies need now are social compacts that are resilient to
demographic
shifts, technological disruptions, and economic shocks.
All at once we seem to hear two
demographic
time-bombs ticking: the continuing population explosion in parts of the third world, and the astonishing rate of aging in the first world.
Europe does face severe
demographic
problems, but size of population is not highly correlated with power, and predictions of Europe’s downfall have a long history of failing to materialize.
Recent changes in China should instead be regarded as part of a broader process, in which competing systems of governance are emerging to cope with complex, globally connected challenges, such as disruptive technologies, geopolitical rivalries, climate change, and
demographic
shifts.
Policymakers may view the continent’s looming
demographic
implosion – which soon will be compounded by the baby-boom generation’s exit into retirement – as a distant event that can be addressed later.
Indeed, the twenty-first century will be marked by the global onset – for the first time in human history – of peaceful
demographic
decline.
It is precisely the champagne-coupe stage of
demographic
decline that is the most critical for growth and prosperity in knowledge-based economies like those of Europe.
China, in particular, is expected to transform the global market for talent, because it, too, is likely to enter
demographic
decline by 2035.
That power has increased for several reasons, the most important of which is
demographic.
The second reason is
demographic.
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