Emerging
in sentence
4230 examples of Emerging in a sentence
That alone probably explains much of the difference among China, in a category of its own,
emerging
Asia, and Latin America.
The rest of
emerging
Asia will also converge reasonably quickly, though not as quickly as China.
If Latin America invests around 20% of its national income in a sustained manner, while
emerging
Asia invests close to 30% – including investments in education –
emerging
Asia will converge significantly more rapidly.
Robots are becoming both less expensive and more efficient, while manufacturers need to make up for labor shortages in several advanced and
emerging
economies.
China and other
emerging
economies may also lose some jobs as firms in advanced economies reverse outsourcing and move manufacturing operations closer to home.
Although the responsibility of industrialized countries and
emerging
economies in the battle against carbon emissions is now well known, Africa’s place in the climate agenda has been largely neglected.
The calculus behind China’s
emerging
national security strategy is simple.
So far, China’s rulers have regarded
emerging
strategic competition with India, Japan, Russia, and the United States as a jostling for influence in Central and South Asia.
Though these low-income countries – including Bangladesh and Vietnam in Asia, Honduras and Bolivia in Latin America, and Kenya and Ghana in Africa – have small, undeveloped financial markets, they are growing rapidly and are expected to become the
emerging
economies of the future.
In the last four years, inflows of private capital into frontier economies have been nearly 50% higher (relative to GDP) than flows into
emerging
market economies.
Such concerns have led
emerging
economies to experiment with a variety of capital controls.
And he supports Japan’s entry into the US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership, an
emerging
regional trading bloc that will exclude China.
Having ventured successfully into
emerging
non-democratic countries whose frailty they are starting to fear, some, out of prudence, are starting to rediscover Europe.
A new bottom-up approach, whose contours are only just emerging, is predicated on the basic principle that the less emissions, the better.
But an
emerging
group of scientists points to phenomena that current theories do not address well.
In part, India’s slowdown paradoxically reflects the substantial fiscal and monetary stimulus that its policymakers, like those in all major
emerging
markets, injected into its economy in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis.
A Clarion Call for
Emerging
MarketsITHACA – With 2012 underway, it is worth reflecting on how a decade of strong economic growth in
emerging
markets led to last year’s resounding political transformations.
From the dramatic events in the Middle East, to the groundswell of support for the anti-corruption crusader Anna Hazare in India, leaders in
emerging
markets are getting a clear message from the streets that growth is not everything.
Corruption takes many forms, but, in
emerging
markets, a combination of factors has turned it into a cancer that ultimately topples regimes.
Rising income inequality is hardly limited to
emerging
markets, but their combination of open corruption and pervasive inequities creates a toxic brew that is undermining support for reforms that would strengthen and consolidate their economic gains.
In many
emerging
markets, a lack of political freedom adds to the combustible mix.
Emerging
markets have a golden opportunity to build on their economic gains and lock in growth and stability by tackling deep-seated problems like corruption.
For many Western citizens, entities such as the EU, no less than the rise of major
emerging
economies such as China and India, are perceived as agents of this decline, rather than as a source of leverage to influence global power shifts and react in accordance with its values and interests.
The rise of transnational forces and non-state actors, not to mention
emerging
powers like China, suggests that there are big changes on the horizon.
Turkey’s Hot-Money ProblemNEW YORK – The ongoing financial volatility in
emerging
economies is fueling debate about whether the so-called “Fragile Five” – Brazil, India, Indonesia, South Africa, and Turkey – should be viewed as victims of advanced countries’ monetary policies or victims of their own excessive integration into global financial markets.
But the IMF did not explicitly recommend that Turkey employ capital-account regulations, despite the mounting evidence from its own staff that the introduction of such rules was working in many
emerging
markets’ favor.
Thus, domestic credit growth began to decelerate only in August 2011, when the escalation of the eurozone crisis made global investors more wary of risky
emerging
markets.
Then, last May, the US Federal Reserve announced its intention to begin to “taper” its multi-trillion-dollar asset-purchase program – so-called “quantitative easing” – triggering large-scale capital flight from
emerging
markets.
Some advocates of a closer Visegrad cooperation criticize Poland's
emerging
strategy, while euroskeptics in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia applaud the Poles.
The surprise has been
emerging
economies’ apparent nonchalance regarding America’s roughshod reign at the World Bank.
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