Emerging
in sentence
4230 examples of Emerging in a sentence
But it is also clear that by 2030, today’s
emerging
markets will account for 60% of global GDP and 40% of the world's consumer spending.
But import competition and labor arbitrage from
emerging
economies have also played a role.
So, while powerful, “hegemonic” countries like the US managed to impose their own rules on weaker partners in the PTAs that they helped to proliferate, big
emerging
economies like India, Brazil, China, and South Africa insisted on rejecting such demands when made as part of multilateral trade rounds like Doha.
Given that the US has abandoned any pretense of leadership on world trade, it is up to major
emerging
economies and like-minded developed countries to establish their own template, one that adheres to trade objectives and discards what special-interest lobbies in hegemons like the US seek to foist on PTAs.
Other countries – Brazil, South Africa, and China among the major
emerging
economies, and Japan and Australia among the developed countries – should back such “garbage-free” PTAs as well.
The global economy was just
emerging
from the deepest recession in the post-World War II period.
Moreover, Obama has been confronted with significant constraints, including the global economic crisis, domestic political polarization, a hostile Congress, and the rise of
emerging
powers that need the US but are unwilling to accept its dominance.
Instead, the French and German leaders are really responding to the growing unpredictability of today's
emerging
European order.
Its leaders must understand that, even though "independence" may sometimes seem like a logical scenario, Taiwan is a small, vulnerable island, and China an
emerging
superpower.
After eight years of aggressive stimulus, developed economies are
emerging
from an extended deleveraging phase that naturally suppressed growth from the demand side.
Indian genes in a developing country did not prevent Vijay Singh
emerging
from Fiji to rival Tiger Woods as the best golfer in the world.
In fact, foreign investment in
emerging
markets already started to subside after 1995, then plummeted with the Asian crisis of 1997, and has remained low ever since - even as the IMF orchestrated many of the bailouts that allegedly distorted investor behavior in the first place!
Moreover, foreign investment in
emerging
markets shifted after 1994 to factories, real estate, service industries, and so forth.
Ever since the beginning of the 1990s, when private credit to
emerging
markets soared to roughly ten times its annual average in 1970-89, the main source of financial contagion has not been moral hazard, but what might best be called globalization hazard.
The hazard struck after 1996, when foreign private investors fled
emerging
markets even faster than they had flooded them.
The most likely scenario is that investors attributed the steep initial rise in credit flows after 1989 to sound policies in
emerging
markets.
As borrowing costs rose in all
emerging
markets - regardless of their fundamental economic health - so did the probability of recurrent crises, forming a vicious circle.
If this were the whole story, then what lay at the root of financial contagion in
emerging
markets would be of secondary importance.
Unfortunately, many
emerging
markets have weak governments that cannot define credible policies for financing intervention in such circumstances.
Emerging
markets are inherently fragile markets.
Elites in
emerging
and developing countries are using the SDG negotiations primarily as a platform to call for international aid transfers.
Indian nationalism has therefore always been the nationalism of an idea – the idea of one land embracing many, a land
emerging
from an ancient civilization, united by a shared history and sustained by a pluralist political system.
The climate-change conference in Copenhagen last December illustrated this decline, as it was the four main
emerging
countries – China, India, Brazil, and South Africa – that held the key negotiations in which US President Barack Obama actively intervened.
The big problems, of course, are how we take account of past responsibility for the carbon in the atmosphere, how we balance aggregate national emissions and per capita figures – China leads in the first category; the US, Australia, and Canada are the biggest culprits in the second – and how we manage technology transfer from developed to
emerging
and poor economies.
The catalyst for exchange-rate appreciation would be not only higher US interest rates, but also a dollar squeeze in
emerging
markets, where foreign debts have increased by $3 trillion since 2010.
Similar parties exist or are
emerging
elsewhere in Europe.
By the second half of 2011, it was evident that
emerging
economies, which had weathered the financial crisis that began in 2008 moderately well, were taking on water as the eurozone crisis deepened.
Nowhere does this question loom larger than in developing and
emerging
economies, which are outside the main theater of the crisis, but are more precariously positioned than the advanced countries.
Until 2015, the outlook is gloomy for Europe and, by extension, for the
emerging
and developing economies.
Their slowdown will have an adverse impact on all
emerging
economies.
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