Economies
in sentence
8198 examples of Economies in a sentence
The world’s most successful
economies
today are in Scandinavia.
But future climate change will affect people, economies, and the environment differently in different places.
With smart choices, investments over the next few decades to reduce risk can contribute to vibrant societies, robust economies, and healthy environments.
Almost everywhere, better education, preparation, and infrastructure can be parts of approaches that boost
economies
and strengthen the fabric of society while reducing risk from climate change.
It had shown that inequality in many advanced
economies
has reached levels not seen since the early part of the twentieth century.
Piketty warns us not to be fooled by the apparent stability and prosperity that was the common experience of the advanced
economies
during a few decades in the second half of the twentieth century.
Productivity gains had stalled, energy prices were high, the backlog of potential technologies that originated in the Great Depression had been exhausted, and waning benefits from
economies
of scale led nearly every economist to project that economic growth would be slower in the future than it had been in the past.
By comparison, consumers in the United States spend the least globally (6.4%), far less than people in emerging
economies
like Brazil (16%) and India (30%).
Urbanization will be critical to facilitate this shift, not least by enabling
economies
of scale.
From an economic standpoint, the Yangtze and Pearl River Deltas – which encompass megacities like Guangzhou, Shanghai, and Shenzhen – are undoubtedly the most important such urban agglomerations, set to generate the higher future productivity gains from
economies
of scale and complementarity.
That is a stunning figure, given high oil prices, abundant investment opportunities, and the nearly moribund US and European
economies
– the main recipients of Russia’s fleeing capital.
Given that China’s economy is larger than the other four BRICS
economies
combined, the group’s initiatives – including its new development bank – are likely to reflect a disproportionate Chinese influence.
This is why today’s most contentious borders separate
economies
where the income gaps between people on the two sides are the greatest.
Stuck in TransitionLONDON – The G-8 recently asked the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, which was created to support the post-communist transitions to democracy and market
economies
in Central and Eastern Europe, to put its experience to use in Egypt.
An important difference is that, unlike Eastern Europe in 1989, the countries of the “Arab Spring” do not have centrally planned
economies.
Since 2008, real (inflation-adjusted) cumulative growth in the developed
economies
has amounted to a mere 5-6%.
And that leverage – much of it the result of monetary expansion in most of the world’s advanced
economies
– is not even serving the goal of boosting long-term aggregate demand.
In some economies, structural rigidities adversely affect investment incentives and returns.
Large pools of savings in sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, and insurance companies could be used, for example, to meet emerging economies’ huge financing needs for infrastructure and urbanization.
If the global economy remains on its current trajectory, a period of intense volatility could destabilize a number of emerging economies, while undermining development efforts worldwide.
For starters, governments must recognize that central banks, however well they have served their economies, cannot go it alone.
In particular, the tradable and non-tradable parts of a range of
economies
differ in important ways.
It is a world in which
economies
are connected directly in the tradable sector of the global economy, and indirectly through the demand and employment linkages between the tradable and non-tradable sectors of individual
economies.
But, for individual economies, relative productivity versus income levels determines the share of global tradable aggregate demand that is accessible.
But it has also reduced employment options for a subset of middle-income people in the tradable sectors of advanced
economies.
In response, both al-Nahda and the PJD are emphasizing job creation, free trade, foreign investment, and a crackdown on the corruption that has plagued their countries’
economies.
Some European analysts predict that, over the longer term, greater stability will follow the political changes in the Maghreb, with perhaps more than a million unemployed Moroccan and Tunisian immigrants returning home if their countries’
economies
improve.
If the region’s new leaders can integrate their economies, a market of more than 75 million consumers would attract more foreign investment and trade with the rest of the world.
No one in power in either country wants a war, but diplomatic dust-ups between China and Japan, the world’s second and third largest economies, respectively, have already taken a toll on their commercial relations.
In addition, the absence of an IMF insurance facility with acceptable terms has been a major gap in the global financial architecture, especially for the more dynamic emerging-market
economies.
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