Faster
in sentence
1977 examples of Faster in a sentence
But, at the end of the day, such a transfer is the most direct approach to
faster
recovery.
Perhaps today the smoke will clear a bit
faster
if we dump the “Great Recession” label immediately and replace it with something more apt, like “Great Contraction.”
For many people, including most economists, globalization implies greater opportunities, expanded trade,
faster
travel, better connectivity, and higher incomes.
And Europe’s preferred solution – more austerity – is merely causing fiscal targets to recede
faster.
As a first step, the State Department must move
faster
to fill critical vacancies for positions dealing with South Asia.
But they knew that they could not improve their product
faster
than engineers could improve theirs, and thus that blocking the spread of tractors would be impossible.
It will not be long before those robots will be able not only to perform more complex tasks, but also to learn
faster
than workers can be trained.
For athletes who want to compete clean, the threat that they may be beaten by a competitor who is not faster, stronger, or more dedicated, but who takes a drug to gain the edge, is profoundly personal.
At the same time, occasional spurts of
faster
growth regularly sowed the seeds for various crises, often resulting in devaluations of the Italian currency, the lira.
First, in line with Moore’s Law, the pace of hardware productivity improvement is dramatically
faster
than it was at earlier stages of technological change.
Between now and 2030, the INDCs indicate that renewable-power capacity will grow four times
faster
than fossil-fuel capacity, with 70% of this new renewables investment in emerging and developing economies.
But property prices have risen
faster
than wages and profits in manufacturing, causing the return on capital for a select few real-estate owners to grow
faster
than China’s GDP.
As a result, China’s top 1% income earners are accumulating wealth significantly
faster
than their counterparts in the rest of the world – and far
faster
than the average Chinese.
To combat market-income inequality, the US also needs
faster
economic growth to boost the pace of job creation and reduce unemployment.
If it allowed the renminbi to appreciate faster, the PBC would not need to buy large quantities of foreign currencies.
Yes, the catastrophe would weaken the regime; but society would weaken even faster, assuring the regime continued control.
But how could such a situation apply to Latin America, where GDP growth is faster, interest rates are higher, and domestic demand is stronger than in the US?
From 1960 to 2007, only four countries in Latin America and the Caribbean – Brazil, Chile, the Dominican Republic, and Panama – grew
faster
than the US.
Yes, Latin American countries’ average per capita GDP is only one-quarter that of the US, so they should be growing
faster
than their rich northern neighbor.
The question is how much
faster.
The Great Divergence had a silver lining: developing countries could use technology transfers from advanced countries to achieve a
faster
rate of economic growth than the countries that were at the industrial vanguard.
If the barriers to private investment in urban infrastructure could be overcome, the world would benefit from lower CO2 emissions,
faster
economic growth, and sounder retirement savings.
Indeed, according to Eurostat (the EU’s statistical office), by the second quarter of 2010, the eurozone was growing
faster
than the US, while the euro remains the second most widely used trading currency.
As a result, the US Federal Reserve must raise interest rates
faster
than expected, while also unwinding its balance sheet.
Only if growth is significantly
faster
over the long run will living standards for the vast majority of the region’s voters begin to rise.
And, in Asia, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s new Japanese government has already depressed the value of the yen and buoyed export prospects by placing reflation through monetary easing at the center of its agenda, while the most recent statistics out of China suggest significantly
faster
export growth than was anticipated.
Five hundred thousand years of experience in hunting and gathering, coupled with cheaper and
faster
molecular analysis, performed by
faster
and cheaper computers makes this task economically feasible.
Governments are using public money to discover new reserves that, if exploited, will drive the world to climate disaster even
faster.
In the Anthropocene, our planet’s life-support system is changing
faster
than ever.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the scenario characterized by
faster
economic growth would also pose a serious threat to environmental sustainability.
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