Emerging
in sentence
4230 examples of Emerging in a sentence
This type of correction would also allow
emerging
markets to pursue more restrictive monetary policies, which they now need, given their greater macroeconomic strength.
Indeed, the world will be characterized for several years by the asymmetry generated by advanced countries’ weakness and
emerging
economies’ strength, which calls for asymmetry in these two groups of countries’ monetary policies.
Surprisingly,
emerging
economies are also experiencing a slowdown; the development of their financial markets is barely keeping pace with GDP growth.
More broadly, officials in
emerging
economies should restart reforms that enable further domestic financial-market development.
No surprise there: we face another year in which global growth will average about 3%, but with a multi-speed recovery – a sub-par, below-trend annual rate of 1% in the advanced economies, and close-to-trend rates of 5% in
emerging
markets.
Fourth, many
emerging
markets – including the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, and China), but also many others – are now experiencing decelerating growth.
The fear premium in oil markets may significantly rise and increase oil prices by 20%, leading to negative growth effects in the US, Europe, Japan, China, India and all other advanced economies and
emerging
markets that are net oil importers.
Finally, real-time data and
emerging
technology tools have the potential to improve patient engagement and adherence, especially among those with chronic conditions caused by non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
The proof is just beneath the surface, where a remarkable bipartisan consensus is
emerging
around an approach to America’s most serious social problems – including homelessness, criminal recidivism, preschool education, and chronic illness – that combines the best principles of conservatism and progressivism.
Futures traders knew about the growth of China and other
emerging
markets; but they expected supply – mainly from low-cost Middle East providers – to increase in tandem with demand.
The
emerging
market crisis of 1997-1998 changed all this.
Moral hazard has been curtailed but the risks of investing in
emerging
markets increased.
And the potential for volatility is particularly great if domestic corporations have large foreign-currency debts, which is true in all of the
emerging
economies under stress today.
Growth and job creation take the hit, as we are seeing today in
emerging
market economies around the world.
Few were ready to admit that the advanced economies had bet the farm on the wrong growth model, much less that they should look to the
emerging
economies for insight into structural impediments to growth, including debt overhangs and excessive inequalities.
And now the darlings of the world economy,
emerging
markets, have proved unable to reverse their own slowdowns.
Russia, Brazil, and South Africa are growing at around 3%, and other
emerging
markets are slowing as well.
Second, while growth has been disappointing in both developed and
emerging
markets, financial markets remain hopeful that better economic data will emerge in the second half of 2013 and 2014, especially in the US and Japan, with the UK and the eurozone bottoming out and most
emerging
markets returning to form.
It was already evident in the first and second quarters of this year that growth in China and other
emerging
markets was slowing.
But the Fed’s recent signals of an early exit from QE – together with stronger evidence of China’s slowdown and Chinese, Japanese, and European central bankers’ failure to provide the additional monetary easing that investors expected – dealt
emerging
markets an additional blow.
A further slowdown in China and other
emerging
economies is another risk to financial markets.
The new political balance
emerging
in Europe after the Socialists’ victory in France’s presidential election creates scope for changes in the terms of the loan agreement that would help to boost economic growth.
But if this
emerging
hierarchy of rights isn’t managed carefully, the legitimacy of the entire human-rights project could be imperiled.
With the trading arrangements of the European common market increasingly subsumed by the globalisation of free trade and agriculture under the World Trade Organisation, and with American dominance of Nato providing the only meaningful security guarantee, and with English now irrevocably established as the world's lingua franca, a clear alternative is
emerging
for the peripheral European countries, both rich and poor.
More broadly, backing away from such a project would undermine the Bank’s promotion of rule-based systems and legal certainty – and would weaken the reformers in developing and
emerging
economies who seek to transform clientilist and patronage-based economies.
Indeed, following a fact-finding mission in 2007, a consensus is
emerging
within the EU that an African Union country should be the first to recognize Somaliland’s independence.
In particular, expansionary monetary policies in the US (indeed, in all advanced countries) are generating high risks for
emerging
economies.
Because interest rates must remain very low in developed countries at least for the next several years, there are now strong incentives to export capital to higher-yielding
emerging
economies.
In short, the medium-term benefits that
emerging
economies could receive from faster growth in the US are now being swamped by short-term risks generated by the “capital tsunami,” as Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has called it.
At the same time,
emerging
markets would gain the full benefits of expansionary monetary policy in the US, to the extent that it boosts demand for their exports.
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