Dried
in sentence
185 examples of Dried in a sentence
What if the sources of economic growth have
dried
up – not temporarily, but permanently?
When liquidity in the key interbank markets
dried
up, the fragilities were exposed – with devastating consequences.
The 1997 Asian financial crisis followed a sudden stop of capital inflows to Asia, and global short-term lending suddenly
dried
up after Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008, causing the Great Recession.
Flecks of
dried
blood peeled up from the floor.
Inflows of foreign direct investment have
dried
up, and GDP growth rates have plummeted from as high as 7% in 2008 and 2009 to merely 2% in 2013.
Brazil's severe summer market jitters, during which the country's risk index suddenly topped Nigeria's and short term credits for international trade
dried
up, began to change the face of the election.
At the time of the crisis itself, however, the main problem was not too much trading, but too little, as liquidity
dried
up for many financial transactions.
This credit replaces the private capital imports that had hitherto financed the country’s net purchases of foreign goods, but which
dried
up because of the crisis, and it finances a capital flight, i.e. the purchase of foreign assets.
Lending
dried
up, fear intensified, and the economy plunged into recession.
This was partly because wages naturally began to rise as the surplus of rural workers
dried
up.
As money
dried
up and federal programs were contracted out to private firms at higher rates, only the richest and politically most important states and communities could compete successfully for the scarce federal grants necessary to pay for services.
According to the forecaster International Market Assessment, “capital flows that have
dried
up are not…a reflection of global market conditions,” but of a loss in confidence among investors, arising principally from fiscal mismanagement, which has led to “price instability, falling investments and eventually a decline in…growth.”
But this co-operation had
dried
up, and India's continued reticence had long passed its use-by date.
But they often were not allowed to start picking until 2-3 hours later, when the dew on the plants
dried
– time for which they were not paid.
In September, the reservoirs in China’s Henan province
dried
up, leaving crops to shrivel and forcing some residents to drink from puddles on the ground.
In the late 1990’s, when the EU decided to harmonize standards for aflatoxins (a group of toxic compounds produced by certain molds), eight member states – including Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain – raised their national standards substantially, which is likely to have caused African exports of cereals,
dried
fruits, and nuts to Europe to decline by as much as $670 million.
But for many emerging markets, external conditions began to worsen around 2012, when China’s growth slowed, commodity prices plummeted, and capital flows
dried
up – developments that sparked a spate of currency crashes spanning nearly every region.
In part, it is because the emotional glue binding Europe together has
dried
up.
Indeed, since the current slump began four years ago, economic activity for many commodity exporters has slowed markedly; their currencies have slid, after nearly a decade of relative stability; interest-rate spreads have widened; and capital inflows have
dried
up.
When foreign credit
dried
up for Brazil years ago, the only way to avoid bankruptcy was to call in the IMF.
Kazakhstan’s Lake Balkhash is now at risk of shrinking substantially, much like the Aral Sea – located on the border with Uzbekistan – which has virtually
dried
up in less than 40 years.
European and other international banks had acquired a lot of dollar-denominated assets which they habitually funded in the interbank market; as the market
dried
up, they were forced to buy dollars.
Credit lines are withdrawn, maturing loans cannot be rolled over and trade finance has
dried
up.
Foreign direct investment in many developing regions has
dried
up, and emerging markets that depend on such capital flows, particularly in South America, have seen their economies thrown into a renewed financial crisis.
There is little doubt that, in the absence of Venezuelan subsidies, Cuba will once again plunge into depression – as it did after Russian assistance
dried
up in early 1990s.
But these hopes were dashed as international lending
dried
up and trade collapsed, sending developing countries down the same spiral that industrial nations took.
After all, credit also
dried
up during the 1991 global recession, and yet funds were flowing briskly within 18 months.
We cannot yet hear the cries of the children who will go to bed hungry because rich countries’ failure to tackle climate change has
dried
up the rains needed for their parents to grow the crops to feed them.
The economic case against austerity is cut and dried: An economic downturn, by definition, implies shrinking private-sector expenditure.
On the contrary, the BNP has traditionally been pro-business, and Bangladesh badly needs foreign direct investment, which has
dried
up with the unrest.
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