Emerging
in sentence
4230 examples of Emerging in a sentence
A second reason is that, while emerging-economy members dislike the US monopoly, they are even more worried about the prospect of a president from a rival
emerging
economy.
But, perhaps most important, the world’s
emerging
powers no longer need the World Bank as much as they once did.
But the way to address China’s internal tensions and
emerging
nationalism, and the resulting strains in its relationships with its neighbors, is not to put the region’s countries in the position of having to choose between China and the US.
A strict framework for allowing, and at the same time limiting, government’s involvement in central-bank decision-making is particularly crucial in
emerging
markets, given that, in most of them, central-bank independence has contributed not only to the eradication of inflation, but also to institution-building.Central-bank independence is a peculiar institutional innovation.
Reverberations are already evident in other
emerging
Asian economies that depend on exports both to China-based manufacturers and to the US and Europe.
Decoupling did not occur in 2008, when exports accounted for about 45% of pan-Asian GDP (excluding Japan) and every
emerging
country in the region experienced a sharp contraction in growth as world trade plummeted.
China and most of the other
emerging
Asian economies have strong government balance sheets – the GDP shares of their budget deficits and public debt are relatively small.
The causes of their concern are clear enough: high unemployment and underemployment in advanced and
emerging
economies; inadequate skills and education for young people and workers to compete in a globalized world; resentment against corruption, including legalized forms like lobbying; and a sharp rise in income and wealth inequality in advanced and fast-growing emerging-market economies.
European multinationals also have large stakes in the Chinese economy, and EU manufacturing exports to China and other
emerging
markets are now almost double those of the US.
Principles of international law – in particular, the
emerging
“responsibility to protect” doctrine and enforcement of the global ban on the use of chemical weapons – dictate that some form of military intervention must occur in order to deter others from using WMDs, particularly against civilians.
And the world is still waiting for the US to implement a 2010 reform of the IMF that would strengthen the position of China and other large
emerging
economies in the institution’s governance structure.
It has also established a new 13,000-troop army division to protect the
emerging
economic corridor.
The aggregate size of the developing countries (especially the major
emerging
economies), their rising incomes, and their ongoing movement up the value chain are having a growing impact on advanced-country economies, particularly these economies’ tradable sectors.
In principle, foreign demand, especially in high-growth
emerging
markets, could make up some of the difference.
But now that the ashes are cooling, different perspectives on bank regulation are
emerging
on either side of the Atlantic.
Adaptations to
emerging
opportunities are one such response.
Yet other countries remain stubbornly outside this
emerging
democratic order, and some democracies may be moving toward authoritarianism.
It is in these areas, however, that the constitutional drafts
emerging
in Brussels are wanting.
Unlike
emerging
economies, Western countries are not well equipped to deal with structural and secular changes – and understandably so.
These
emerging
institutional arrangements include contracts and commercial law, bankruptcy and labor codes, and courts to oversee their enforcement.
Some observers see the outline of a democratic system
emerging.
But the evidence
emerging
from successive rounds of QE in the UK and the US suggests that while it did lower bond yields, the extra money was largely retained within the banking system, and never reached the real economy.
With protracted recession in Europe and slowdowns in
emerging
markets, concern about budget deficits has given way to apprehension about growth.
The biggest difference today is that rapid technological change, coupled with
emerging
environmental and inter-generational challenges, is directly affecting governments’ ability to act.
Urbanization may be leveling off in many advanced economies, but it will continue in
emerging
countries.
Ten years later, inequality continues to worsen within developing countries, including the so-called BRICS
emerging
economies.
There is even happy news for
emerging
markets, which are still bracing for US Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes but have gained a better backdrop against which to adjust.
Fortunately, a patient Fed, a resilient (for now) China, and a growing Europe and US will help most
emerging
economies.
But there are green shoots
emerging.
A less pessimistic view holds that, after 2008, it became inevitable that the global economy would unhitch itself from the US consumer engine and adjust to the rise of
emerging
consumer economies, not least China.
Back
Next
Related words
Economies
Markets
Countries
Growth
Their
Global
Other
World
Which
Financial
Economic
Advanced
Developing
Capital
Crisis
Would
Economy
Major
While
Should