Economies
in sentence
8198 examples of Economies in a sentence
Afghans can contribute in a tangible way here by reopening the North-South route connecting the resource rich
economies
of Central Asia to densely populated India and Pakistan.
Among the G-7 economies, only Italy has done worse than the UK since the Great Recession began.
In terms of global life expectancy, total world wealth, the overall level of technology, growth prospects in emerging economies, and global income distribution, things look rather good, while on still other dimensions – say, global warming or domestic income inequality and its effects on countries’ social solidarity – they look bad.
Consider the Great Depression and the implications of market economies’ inability back then to recover on their own, owing to the burden of long-term unemployment.
In its annual survey of leading global risks, the World Economic Forum noted that, “the invention of cheap, synthetic alternatives to high-value agricultural exports … could suddenly destabilize vulnerable
economies
by removing a source of income on which farmers rely.”
Once confidence began to recover and market conditions stabilized, the East Asian
economies
shifted their monetary and fiscal policies toward expansion and embraced large-scale exchange-rate depreciation – efforts that enhanced their export competitiveness.
Global integration brought tremendous benefits: the international division of labor, which are so clearly proved by the theory of comparative advantage; dynamic benefits such as
economies
of scale and the rapid spread of innovations from one country to another, which are less easy to demonstrate by static equilibrium theory; and noneconomic benefits such as the freedom of choice associated with the international movement of goods, capital, and people, and the freedom of thought associated with the international movement of ideas.
The situation is different in emerging and developing
economies.
There are good reasons to think that NGDP targeting is better suited to emerging and developing
economies
than to industrialized countries.
These
economies
are more frequently subject to adverse terms-of-trade shocks, such as increases in world oil prices or declines in prices for their commodity exports.
Their
economies
also tend to suffer larger supply shocks from natural disasters, other weather events, social unrest, and unexpected productivity changes.
All of this has important implications for emerging
economies.
And, as the fate of Mexico’s northern towns suggests, emerging
economies
are not immune from this process.
A better understanding of the various issues and possible remedies could enable science to flourish again in the Muslim world, with far-reaching benefits for its
economies
and societies.
CAMBRIDGE – With China set to lead a new $50 billion international financial institution, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), most of the debate has centered on the United States’ futile efforts to discourage other advanced
economies
from joining.
Rich
economies
(Western Europe, the US, Canada, and Australia) moved steadily ahead, while most poorer countries, despite some episodes of decent growth, did not move significantly closer to the leaders’ productivity and income levels.
Over-dependence on aid and oil revenues characterizes almost all the
economies
of WANA.
Political scientists tell us that rentier economies, or
economies
that depend on oil and foreign aid, stimulate greed and grievances.
The absence of a modern industrial base diminishes the WANA economies’ ability to absorb the surplus generated by oil revenues.
The silver lining is that the absence of a modern industrial base means that, unlike more developed economies, WANA has no ailing industries to rescue.
Long-term current-account surpluses in some countries (China, other rapidly growing Asian economies, and Gulf oil producers) permitted the long-term financing of deficits in others (the United Kingdom, Australia, Spain, Ireland, and, above all, the US).
The world’s major industrial economies, meanwhile, are maintaining very low interest rates.
PARIS: Save for the Netherlands, Europe's
economies
are languishing: according to the OECD, average growth in Western Europe will not exceed 1.6% this year, a drop from the 2.7% growth last year.
The economic slowdown comes at the worst possible moment, as Europe readies itself for monetary union (emu), and the tough budget constraints imposed as a precondition for joining limit the governments' ability to use old fashioned stimulants to get their ailing
economies
moving.
Advanced MalaiseNEW YORK – Economics is often called the dismal science, and for the last half-decade it has come by its reputation honestly in the advanced
economies.
On both sides of the Atlantic, market
economies
are failing to deliver for most citizens.
This will undermine economic performance, making it very unlikely that Russia will catch up with the advanced
economies
in the next 10-15 years, as officials promise.
The common element is that while the pieces are in place for faster growth in the three largest
economies
– the US, the eurozone, and China – politics may prevent it from materializing.
It is expected that their
economies
will overtake those of the G-7 by 2030, and that, by 2050, Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and Russia will, with the US, be the worlds’ dominant
economies.
As government, business, and academic leaders agreed at a recent meeting held under the auspices of the Emerging Markets Symposium, the promise of emerging-market countries will not be realized if their cities, and consequently their economies, are sick.
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