Faster
in sentence
1977 examples of Faster in a sentence
I don't want his movies to move any
faster
than they do.
The
faster
and more robust recoveries that characterized most previous recessions reflected aggressive countercyclical monetary policy by the Fed, which cut the short-term interest rate very sharply.
In other words, the market is working
faster
and faster, and it’s getting harder for anyone to stay ahead for long, whether it’s Groupon’s merchant-customers or Groupon itself.
Because consumer prices fell
faster
than wages, the welfare of those who remained employed rose in the Great Depression.
The common element is that while the pieces are in place for
faster
growth in the three largest economies – the US, the eurozone, and China – politics may prevent it from materializing.
Japan is the one place where the political system has delivered change that bodes well for
faster
growth.
But, instead of accepting the natural decline in their populations, rich-country governments absorb more and more people to hold down wages and thereby grow
faster.
And they saw an economy growing considerably
faster
than North Atlantic economies had when they possessed the same absolute and relative economy-wide productivity levels.
The V-shaped recovery that Mexico experienced three years ago came off bigger and
faster
than expected.
It is because we cannot go on for much longer economizing on labor
faster
than we can find new uses for it.
A crisis, Dornbusch noted, “takes a much longer time coming than you think, and then it happens much
faster
than you would have thought.”
But there is a
faster
way: treating the missing links as a break not in a legal chain, but in a knowledge chain.
If nominal demand grows
faster
than real potential growth, inflation is inevitable; and nominal demand growth can be constrained only through a mix of fiscal and monetary policy.
In fact, because he has pushed harder than his predecessors, his star is falling
faster.
But I cannot (and do not) then complain if my income does not grow
faster
and
faster.
As it stands, the United States – and presumably the United Kingdom – plans to begin tapering QE when the economy is growing faster, unemployment is lower, and government and household revenues are rising.
New combat scenarios – smaller units, higher fighting power,
faster
deployment – are not covered by today’s existing arms-control regimes.
When, as is usually the case, the long-term interest rate is higher than the GDP growth rate, the wealthy may accumulate wealth
faster
than the rest of the economy – a point made by the economist Thomas Piketty.
The priority in fighting terrorism should be police and intelligence service cooperation, which produces much
faster
results and limits the capacity of extremists to mobilize.
Prior to the crisis, regulatory authorities focused mainly on removing barriers to trading, and generally favored measures that made markets more complete by fostering faster, cheaper trading of a wider variety of financial claims.
Technological change promises even
faster
trading speeds in the near future.
Rather than poor countries growing
faster
than the rich (as we would expect from Economics 101), mainly the reverse is true.
The CCI shows that while rich countries tend to be less corrupt than poor ones, countries that are relatively less corrupt, for their level of development, such as Ghana, Costa Rica, or Denmark, do not grow any
faster
than others.
Nor do countries that improve in their CCI score, such as Zambia, Macedonia, Uruguay, or New Zealand, grow
faster.
By contrast, the World Bank’s Government Effectiveness Indicator suggests that countries that, given their income level, have relatively effective governments or improve their performance, do tend to grow
faster.
The good news is that wages are already growing
faster
than GDP – a trend that is likely to continue, as demographic change restricts the supply of new labor.
This has been a by-product of the increase in real demand, achieved by reducing unemployment to a level at which rising wages contribute to
faster
price growth.
Fortunately, technological progress lets us define genes much
faster
than Mendel could.
Meanwhile, China and India are steadily increasing the size of their nuclear arsenals, and Pakistan is doing so even faster, even spelling out plans to combine battlefield nukes with conventional weapons.
As this approach facilitates the rise of global super-firms, it creates serious problems for labor markets and societies, because it destroys mid-level jobs based on old skills
faster
than comparable jobs based on new skills can be created.
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