Emerging
in sentence
4230 examples of Emerging in a sentence
While developed countries in Europe, North America, and Asia are rapidly aging,
emerging
economies are predominantly youthful.
Many large companies in
emerging
markets such as Russia and India train their own employees, because college graduates often lack the requisite skills.
The problem was that central banks, finance ministries, and multilateral organizations like the International Monetary Fund – the pillars of the global economy’s institutional framework – failed to grasp globalization’s
emerging
characteristics and effects, owing partly to the difficulty of discerning structural shifts in the huge mass of data now available.
India has an
emerging
middle class of several hundred million, and English is an official language spoken by some 50 to 100 million.
The problem is that 1999 levels are not enough, because producers now have China and other
emerging
markets with which to contend.
But now that growth in
emerging
markets has slowed, their export markets are weakening.
The convulsions in the clean-tech sector are simply symptoms of a cycle that characterizes
emerging
technologies: excitement, inflated expectations, and consolidation – ultimately followed by stability and the resumption of growth.
One lesson from the German experience is that sudden changes in regulation can create peaks and valleys in demand that are not helpful to an industry that is still
emerging.
The shakeout in the clean-tech industry has been tough; but it has also been typical of
emerging
technologies, and, by weeding out the weaker players, it has made the sector more robust.
Yet even the best efforts by the International Monetary Fund, the United States, and the European Union to achieve this will be hobbled by investment agreements that they themselves have pressed on Ukraine and many other
emerging
economies.
They have shown that the major capital inflows were not from
emerging
markets, but from Europe, where there was no net balance-of-payments surplus.
Moreover, the G20 has lately lost steam in supporting closer coordination of monetary and fiscal policies among the world’s major advanced and
emerging
economies.
It may be called an
emerging
market, but it has first rate financial, educational and research institutions.
On the contrary, as a measure of GDP, foreign financial flows to Africa are higher than those to
emerging
markets, and they come from a broader range of sources.
Finally, local-currency bond markets – and, more generally, domestic capital markets – in
emerging
economies must be explored further, in order to lengthen the tenure of financial flows.
The Humanities CrisisNEW YORK – A striking symmetry is
emerging
in debates about the future of higher education around the world.
Fortunately, promising new models for making education more coherent and capacious are
emerging.
Indeed, both advanced and
emerging
economies have long balked at the notion of strengthening regional and international institutions by delegating more national authority to them.
As investors sought the higher yields on land, property, equities, bonds, and bank deposits that were attainable in
emerging
markets after 2008, capital inflows to Latin America tripled, boosting asset prices, credit, and aggregate demand.
According to a recent survey of 65 mainly
emerging
countries worldwide by the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), which ranks countries by their education standards, around half of Latin American 15-year-olds performed below the basic levels in math, science, and reading comprehension.
A New Chance for DarfurNEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY – As the crisis in Sudan’s Darfur region worsens and negotiaitions to end it drag on, an international consensus is
emerging
around a “muscular” policy based on public denunciation, severe economic sanctions, and, increasingly, threats of military force.
Yet the
emerging
policy consensus contains no positive incentives to resolve the Darfur crisis.
Such policies might include:The
emerging
policy consensus toward Sudan is predicated on an approach that has already undermined respect for Western values throughout the non-Western world.
Unlike in the past, however,
emerging
and developing countries avoided the worst, precisely because they had learned to accumulate foreign reserves and regulate cross-border capital flows, and to ease such measures to prevent or mitigate sudden stops.
The IMF is making strides in the right direction, but
emerging
markets will have to remain in the lead.
The black market’s premium (relative to the official exchange rate) in most European countries (and in Japan) skyrocketed through the early 1950s, reaching levels that we now tend to associate with “unstable”
emerging
markets.
In the current setting, it is more plausible to expect a variant of the 1980s, with more
emerging
and developing countries seeking IMF programs.
Though depoliticization and apathy have held back serious challenges to German dominance, such challenges are
emerging.
But the rise of India and China means that the time-tested posture of Western democracies toward
emerging
states to “do as we say, not as we do” will become less tenable.
Some even suggest that women are
emerging
at the top because men do not want to take the blame for impending failure.
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