Economies
in sentence
8198 examples of Economies in a sentence
Together, the central banks of the U.S., U.K and Japan increased the stock of money in their
economies
by 3.7 trillion dollars.
INCRA would not only be a European or an American rating agency, it would be a truly international one, in which, in particular, the emerging
economies
would have an equal interest, voice and representation.
Now what that really meant in terms of the Porter-Henderson framework was the collapse of certain kinds of
economies
of scale.
They routinely rank among the top 15 countries of the most globally competitive economies, but at the same time, they rank very high on the OECD Better Life Index.
Synthetic cell technologies will power the next industrial revolution and transform industries and
economies
in ways that address global sustainability challenges.
Middle-out economics rejects the neoclassical economic idea that
economies
are efficient, linear, mechanistic, that they tend towards equilibrium and fairness, and instead embraces the 21st-century idea that
economies
are complex, adaptive, ecosystemic, that they tend away from equilibrium and toward inequality, that they're not efficient at all but are effective if well managed.
It happened because a group of us reminded the middle class that they are the source of growth and prosperity in capitalist
economies.
We plutocrats need to see that the United States of America made us, not the other way around; that a thriving middle class is the source of prosperity in capitalist economies, not a consequence of it.
Now, the first of these transformations is the basic structural change of the
economies
and societies that I've already begun to illustrate through the description of Beijing.
By involving local communities, investing in their agriculture and their economies, by monitoring more carefully, by enforcing the law more strictly.
No wonder these flows have huge impacts on
economies
and on poor people.
One billion people will need jobs in Africa, so if we don't grow our
economies
fast enough, we're sitting on a ticking time bomb, not just for Africa but for the entire world.
And then looking at the emerging economies, top of the BRICS, pleased to say, is Brazil.
Now, we simulated labor supply and labor demand for the largest 15
economies
in the world, representing more than 70 percent of world GDP, and the overall picture looks like this by 2020.
By 2030, we will face a global workforce crisis in most of our largest economies, including three out of the four BRIC countries.
Inequality is stifling human growth and potential and
economies.
Stawi is leveraging
economies
of scale and using modern manufacturing processes to create value for not only its owners but its workers, who have an ownership in the business.
It's happening in some senses under the radar, as we are all preoccupied with what's going in Ukraine, what's going on in the Middle East, what's going on with ISIS, what's going on with ISIL, what's happening with the future of our
economies.
In the largest European economies, productivity used to grow five percent per annum in the '50s, '60s, early '70s.
For developing countries and emerging economies, the problem and the challenge is to grow without emissions, because they must develop; they have very poor populations.
Bbut with energy systems currently reliant on fossil fuel, as those
economies
grow so will emissions.
So this poses huge challenges for the issue of economic growth, because if we have our high carbon infrastructure in place, it means that if our
economies
grow, then so do our emissions.
People are worried about their security, their economies, the changes of culture.
Speaking of waste, allow me to point out an interesting paradox that is threatening our
economies
as we speak.
The impact it would leave affected not only these slaves and their descendants, but the
economies
and histories of large parts of the world.
The slave trade had become an arms race, altering societies and
economies
across the continent.
When the slave trade was finally outlawed in the Americas and Europe, the African kingdoms whose
economies
it had come to dominate collapsed, leaving them open to conquest and colonization.
The fundamental question is this: How are we going to create economic growth in advanced and developed
economies
like the United States and across Europe at a time when they continue to struggle to create economic growth after the financial crisis?
In particular, these developed
economies
continue to see debts and deficits, the decline and erosion of both the quality and quantity of labor and they also see productivity stalling.
That's true in the molecular pandemonium that lets your cells function, the tangled thicket of neurons that produces your thoughts and identity, your network of friends and family, all the way up to the structures and
economies
of our cities across the planet.
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