Fallout
in sentence
307 examples of Fallout in a sentence
The
fallout
from the financial crisis was more severe, and massive redistribution of income and wealth toward the top had weakened aggregate demand.
But if the European
fallout
from Asia and Russia turns out to be severe, European Union governments may be compelled to re-examine the single currency’s deflationary bias.
The Defeated Remain DefiantHARARE: Before Zimbabwe's Presidential election earlier this month, I believed that if the election were not handled properly, there would be serious
fallout
in the country and throughout Southern Africa.
If Argentina and Canada coordinated their actions, they could do much to contain the economic
fallout
from Trump’s threats and lessen the impact of economic retaliation.
And every year, the
fallout
widens.
But the initial euphoria that accompanied the so-called “Orange Revolution” quickly faded, and Ukraine is still dealing with the political and economic
fallout.
The
fallout
from a war in Iran would pin down the US in the Middle East for years to come, undermining its new strategic priorities.
Fortunately, this scenario still seems rather unlikely – as EU countries inside and outside the eurozone seem keen to avoid the enormous economic, financial, political, and social
fallout
that such a scenario implies.
And yet nothing about the
fallout
from the crisis was inevitable.
Within three months, the
fallout
destroyed the entire international monetary system, and US President Richard Nixon took the dollar off the gold standard.
This has been fueled by a decade-long search for yield in a world of excessive liquidity and low interest rates, delivered courtesy of the solution adopted to deal with the economic
fallout
of the 2008 global financial crisis: quantitative easing.
Perhaps most controversially, a third stream of litigation might contest the yawning wealth and income inequalities exposed by the pandemic’s economic
fallout.
PRINCETON/TORONTO – In April, the International Labor Organization predicted that 195 million workers worldwide would “suffer severely” in the second quarter of this year, owing to the economic
fallout
of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Since the first SDRs were issued, there have been repeated calls for the mechanism to be expanded to tackle issues such as unequal development (in the 1970s), the aftermath of oil shocks (in the 1990s), and the
fallout
from the 2008 global financial crisis.
Second, comparisons of mortality and infection rates between countries and regions, and the terrifying depth and scale of the pandemic’s economic fallout, have put a premium on competent governance for much of the public.
Governments have also responded predictably to the pandemic’s economic fallout, following the same model established during similar episodes in the past, not least the 2008 financial crisis.
Rather, the danger is that the
fallout
from one disaster will combine with others, producing unprecedented negative feedback effects – possibly accelerated by malign human actors.
But no country will be spared from the economic
fallout
of the virus.
Her government, a typical German worker is told, will be liable for €100 billion of new debt that the EU will use to help foreigners recover from the pandemic’s economic
fallout.
The US has responded with extraordinary fiscal and monetary stimulus measures, which will help mitigate the immediate
fallout
from the crisis.
The world urgently needs honest and transparent information-sharing by national leaders, coupled with aggressive steps to contain the pandemic, extensive stimulus to mitigate the economic fallout, and a carefully calibrated strategy to restart economic activity as soon as it is safe to do so.
Some fear that the epidemic’s timing – at the start of the week-long Chinese New Year celebration, and in the middle of traditional school-break travels – will exacerbate the economic
fallout
by keeping many people away from shops, restaurants, and travel hubs.
At the same time, many are implementing programs and policies to support households and businesses, in the hope of mitigating the economic
fallout
of lockdowns and social distancing.
But, even with rock-bottom borrowing costs, the economic
fallout
from the pandemic has forced one vulnerable country after another to declare sovereign default, or to signal that it may do so soon.
But that uncertainty will only exacerbate the economic fallout, because it will undermine investment and household consumption.
We may then need new laws and global treaties to mitigate potential negative
fallout
and curb the power of the organizations that run these new currencies.
To address both the pandemic and the economic
fallout
from it, the G20 must do three things.
African governments are under pressure to continue servicing their external loans, leaving them with few resources to confront a historic pandemic and its economic
fallout.
Despite this, migrant communities are most vulnerable to the economic
fallout
of the pandemic.
Trump demonstrated no concern for his policy’s political
fallout
in Seoul and Tokyo, or for its impact on the political fortunes of South Korean President Moon Jae-in and former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
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