Faster
in sentence
1977 examples of Faster in a sentence
It’s also the stigma and the stress that kills faster.”
They designed planes, computers, and furniture, figured out how to lay out an assembly line, helped to make new cars
faster
and refrigerators more efficient, pushed the limits of computer chips, and invented new medicines.
In a demand-constrained regime, recent measures to increase labor-market flexibility – and thus facilitate the lowering of wages by employers – will not result in
faster
growth.
Because financial circumstances change quickly, regulators, who can adapt to new conditions
faster
than Congress can, should have discretion to set capital-requirement and loan-risk tradeoff benchmarks.
Like the heat beneath the proverbial boiling frogs, the level of surveillance in Western democracies has been ratcheted up slowly – but far
faster
than citizens can respond.
And if housing and mortgage security prices don’t just fall but collapse, everyone should remember that construction employment falls
faster
than employment in tradable goods can grow.
The rise of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere B which is the main cause of the long-term climate change B might actually have some directly beneficial effects, since a higher concentration of carbon dioxide can stimulate the
faster
growth of some types of forests and some crops.
And, if Brynjolfsson and McAfee are correct, the labor-displacement process will be much
faster
than anticipated.
What is known is that the population of scientists is increasing at a
faster
rate than the human population as a whole.
Though there may be cases where authoritarian societies had success in achieving economic growth, Botswana, an exemplar of African democracy, has grown
faster
than most authoritarian states.
Labor costs grew much
faster
than for most competitors.
In Latvia, for example, unit labor costs grew ten times
faster
than in the United States from 2001-2008.
As wages grew
faster
than productivity in the run-up to the crisis, competitiveness also suffered, and domestic demand became the main engine of growth.
Money does not go to the Cayman Islands because sunshine makes it grow faster; this money thrives on the absence of sunshine.
There is no way around a reduction in relative domestic prices as long as these countries remain in the currency union: either they deflate, or their trading partners inflate
faster.
Indeed, America grew far
faster
in the decades after World War II, when it was growing together, than it has since 1980, when it began growing apart.
With
faster
wage growth at a stable nominal exchange rate, and by encouraging unit labor costs to converge to those in developed economies, China’s real international competitiveness would be better calibrated.
This, too, causes income concentration to occur
faster
than it did two or three decades ago, when wealthy men married women less likely to have comparably large incomes.
Economic growth picked up in the final quarter of 2012 to 7.9% – half a percentage point
faster
than the 7.4% increase in GDP in the third quarter.
But the really bad news is that water consumption is growing
faster
than population – indeed, in the twentieth century it grew at twice the rate.
A good Danish or Bulgarian player improves much
faster
if he joins Manchester United or Barcelona.
Moreover, the fear that one must get in on the boom before it is too late often drives people to bid up home prices
faster
now.
All that is required is that growth in housing supply eventually outstrips investors’ faith in capitalism to sustain
faster
growth in demand.
It was not simply that America and Germany grew
faster
than Britain after 1870.
Economies can learn
faster
than they can invent, so less developed countries can achieve much
faster
growth than was experienced by today’s industrialized countries when they were becoming wealthy.
Part of the Tea Party’s founding myth, of course, is that smaller government will lead to
faster
growth and greater prosperity for all.
When the Fed’s job was, as former Chair William McChesney Martin famously put it, “to take away the punch bowl” as soon as wages started to rise
faster
than productivity, intellectual capture was not a concern: central bankers were not spending much time with workers and union leaders.
Because its market grew
faster
than its tax, regulatory, and judicial arrangements could evolve, the country was beset by rising income inequality, pollution, financial risks, and corruption – all of which must be addressed in the next phase of structural reforms.
The reported costs of global warming are higher than in earlier studies because it takes into account the mounting evidence that the process of global warming is highly complex and non-linear, with a non-negligible chance that it may proceed much
faster
than had previously been thought and that the extent of warming may be much greater than had previously been thought.
According to the French economist Thomas Piketty, income inequality rises when the return on capital exceeds economic growth, meaning that, by itself,
faster
economic growth would reduce inequality.
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