Demographic
in sentence
773 examples of Demographic in a sentence
For the US, this means recognizing Russia for what it is: a large, still-important country with a hybrid political system and serious domestic economic, demographic, and political challenges.
The Racism of the Welfare StateTwo
demographic
acids are corroding Continental Europe's welfare states.
Demographic
differences are relevant not just in comparing Japan and the US, but also in explaining most of the differences in longer-term growth rates across developed economies.
The current strength of the German economy is also partly due to this temporary
demographic
stabilization.
Two lessons emerge from this consideration of the influence of
demographic
factors on economic growth.
Slow growth in Japan over the last decade was due not to insufficiently aggressive macroeconomic policies, but to an unfavorable
demographic
trend.
In Europe, meanwhile, many of our problems are exemplified by what is happening in France, where President Nicolas Sarkozy’s attempt to recognize
demographic
and fiscal reality by raising the retirement age from 60 to 62 provoked a wave of strikes and stormy protests from workers and students.
Countries with great
demographic
potential therefore inherently have great Olympic potential.
But the disparity between its
demographic
size and its Olympic success also shows that political multipolarity and sports multipolarity are not cast from the same mold.
Unless action is taken to address the issue, hundreds of communities that simply wish to practice their religion peacefully will face profound psychological and
demographic
consequences, fleeing into exile to preserve their faith.
Russia does not have the same
demographic
crisis – a large cohort of unemployed youth – that has catalyzed change in the Arab world.
(Indeed, its
demographic
problem is just the opposite: not enough young people.)
There will be appeals to the European Central Bank to expand the monetary base, as if imitating the dollar were the answer to all the industrial, structural, and
demographic
problems plaguing Europe.
The problem is that hatred and
demographic
changes are making, many people believe, even the two-state solution impossible.
After all, the financial singularity implies that all prices would be based on such things as optimally projected future corporate profits and the correlation of profits with expected technological innovations and long-term
demographic
changes.
To be sure, many of the Sykes-Picot borders reflected deals cut in Europe rather than local
demographic
or historical realities.
Russian society and its leaders have no clear vision of the future, and the country’s
demographic
decline offers little hope of a rapid and sustainable turnaround.
Given the need for further economic restructuring – and in view of long-term
demographic
trends, which will reduce the labor supply – pre-2008 growth rates are unlikely to be restored.
Whereas most developed countries will experience a shortage of people as the century progresses, America is one of the few that may avoid
demographic
decline and maintain its share of world population.
Nevertheless, it is difficult to identify any
demographic
segment in which attachment to the global community outweighs attachment to the country.
While the rise in healthy life expectancy is a positive development, this
demographic
shift poses a serious threat to many economies, which are already losing vitality.
This positive trend is likely to persist, given that it is based on structural geographic and
demographic
factors, such as rising exports, improved trade conditions, and steadily increasing domestic consumption.
By contrast, France and many other European countries face more favorable
demographic
conditions and worse economic conditions, including high unemployment.
Such a scenario would reverse the gloomy
demographic
and economic trends in Russia’s eastern territories, and would strengthen Russia’s geopolitical position in the process.
Hollande’s reference point seems to be the post-war idyll of his youth, a time of rapid growth,
demographic
recovery, scarce immigration, and scant global competition.
Many other factors, of course, influence growth and convergence: macroeconomic stability, the efficiency and robustness of the financial sector, the terms of trade, the quality of public administration,
demographic
factors, and political factors.
Without careful policy planning, the continent’s anticipated
demographic
windfall could turn out to be a ticking time bomb.
Many in the region are now worried that they will reap little from this fleeting period of industrialization, and that current demographic, social, and economic trends could lead to security and humanitarian crises in the future.
African policymakers should keep these
demographic
and economic trends in mind as they formulate their national development plans.
The region can still harness its
demographic
dividend, but it is now in a race against the machines.
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