Economies
in sentence
8198 examples of Economies in a sentence
They also cite investment opportunities in emerging markets, and make the obvious point that if China and India stay on track, their
economies'
relative weight in the world will double in the next decade or so, as rapid real growth is accompanied by appreciation in their real exchange rates.
So the going could be rough, as it always is when
economies
overheat.
The problem is that for poor economies, raising the capital needed to relax binding growth constraints is difficult.
The Cooperation CrisisPARIS – The rise of emerging
economies
worldwide has generated much optimism, in terms not only of economic development, but also of global cooperation.
In fact, the opposite is true: the logic of national sovereignty has staged a comeback, with major
economies
consistently undermining cooperation on issues ranging from security to trade to climate change.
This is a high-stakes issue, as it will determine the capacity of states to remain fiscally solvent in increasingly digital
economies.
History provides many examples of excessive monetary finance, from Weimar Germany to the many emerging
economies
where governments have pressured central banks to finance large fiscal deficits, with high inflation the inevitable result.
Instead, the rapid growth of the emerging economies, especially coal-burning China, has caused global CO2 emissions to soar.
LONDON – As 2015 begins, the reality of deficient global demand and deflationary risks in the world’s major
economies
is starkly apparent.
Even
economies
experiencing more robust economic growth will miss their targets: inflation in the United States will not reach 1.5% this year, and China’s rate reached a five-year low of 1.4% last November.
In the advanced economies, low inflation reflects not just the temporary impact of falling commodity prices, but also longer-term wage stagnation.
For starters, the entry of China’s massive labor force into the global market economy changed the power balance between capital and labor in the advanced
economies.
In India, as in other fast-growing economies, scarce public resources, such as land, minerals, oil and gas, and telecommunication spectrum, have shot up in market value recently, generating extremely high unearned income for the politically well-connected.
If India and the US move towards overcoming the most pervasive inequality of all, they will reinvigorate their democracies – and their
economies.
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.
According to conservative forecasts, its GDP will amount to around $9 trillion, with just six
economies
– Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, and Peru –accounting for 86% of that total.
The two largest regional blocs – Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance, both of which include the region’s six largest
economies
– are taking seriously the possibility of convergence.
But it is working hard to reverse this trend, including by completing agreements that cover nearly all of the region’s
economies.
But a growing share is now being channeled to manufacturing in sectors that generate higher-wage jobs and transfer much-needed skills to host
economies.
First, the euro has eliminated the possibility of exchange-rate turbulence and speculative currency attacks that more vulnerable
economies
could have expected in the current turmoil.
Divergences between euro-area
economies
in terms of growth and inflation have been a persistent challenge.
Though differences are no bigger than those found within larger
economies
such as the US or Germany, they risk being amplified by the crisis.
This requires not just reinforcing resilience in the face of crisis, but also equipping euro-area
economies
for the longer-term challenges of globalization, aging, resource scarcity, and climate change.
By the 1990’s, inflation was old news in the advanced economies, with much of the developing world soon to follow.
So the eurozone’s crisis-stricken
economies
cannot grow.
The D-Mark would, initially at least, appreciate sharply - with dire consequences for German industry, and for the "pegged" and semi-pegged
economies
who will find themselves clinging to a rocket.
For many commodities, such as oil, the reserve price is higher in emerging countries than in developed
economies.
Ultimately, emerging economies’ absolute size and rate of growth both matter in charting commodity demand and the future trajectory of global commodity prices, with per capita income clearly linked to consumers’ wealth.
And they can be disastrous to exporting economies, which risk rapid currency appreciation and thus a loss of competitiveness.
It has also reduced poverty sharply in many emerging
economies
– indeed, for this reason alone, the world economy needs to remain open and interconnected.
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