Growing
in sentence
6077 examples of Growing in a sentence
Africa’s private sector, in particular, has a crucial role to play in developing innovative solutions that address malaria’s
growing
resistance to existing drugs, as well as mosquitoes’
growing
resistance to insecticides.
The phrase “new normal” is a clever bit of messaging by China’s leaders, who must explain to the country’s 1.4 billion citizens why the economy will no longer be
growing
by 10% a year.
Despite the high rate of HIV/AIDS infections, Malawi’s population, like that of many developing nations, is
growing
rapidly.
Inflation has surpassed the double-digit mark, forcing the central bank to raise interest rates – an approach that is unsustainable, given the deepening recession and the ballooning cost of servicing Brazil’s rapidly
growing
debt.
Preventing Europe’s Next Banking CrisisAs shockwaves from America’s subprime disaster continue to reverberate, there is
growing
doubt about Europe’s ability to handle a financial crisis on a major scale.
The immigrants themselves, they suggested, might have reactionary moral codes, but their children,
growing
up in today’s Britain, America, or Continental Europe, would be quite different.
Terrorism aside, wouldn’t they worry if Islam came to have a
growing
influence on British law and politics?
That is why the American Society for Clinical Pathology, where I work, is cooperating with other global health-care innovators to attack the region’s
growing
cancer crisis.
And, more broadly, there is a
growing
awareness of how conflicts in the Middle East and demographic trends in Africa could threaten European stability.
While some tweaks to trade relations are needed, in the past such changes would have been pursued in an orderly and cooperative fashion – not under constant and
growing
tariff pressure.
I have been saying and writing for years that the dryland regions stretching West to East – from Senegal to Mali, Niger, Chad, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, and Afghanistan – are a
growing
tinder box, where climate change, drought, hunger, and population growth are creating ever greater instability.
Thus, a
growing
proportion of the workforce – often below the radar screen of official statistics – is losing hope of finding gainful employment, while the unemployment rate (especially for poor, unskilled workers) will remain high for a much longer period of time than in previous recessions.
The aggregate size of the developing countries (especially the major emerging economies), their rising incomes, and their ongoing movement up the value chain are having a
growing
impact on advanced-country economies, particularly these economies’ tradable sectors.
So American eyes are turning elsewhere: to China with its 1.3 billion people and an economy
growing
at 8-10%, year in and year out, and to India, with its 1.1 billion people and 6% annual growth.
While America increases its population somewhat, due to normal reproductive rates and large immigration flows, Europe's share of the world's population is approaching a mere 4% and seems doomed to
growing
older as it shrinks even more.
The
growing
number of aspiring innovators toiling in home garages may self-produce some of their capital goods.
Meanwhile, China’s
growing
geopolitical heft has led to muscle-flexing and territorial claims in Asia that disregard international norms.
The election last autumn of the activist Park Won-soon as mayor of Seoul demonstrated the
growing
strength of the youth vote, which took the ruling Grand National Party completely by surprise.
He also seems cognizant of the
growing
power of social networking in politics.
In an era of
growing
inequality and joblessness, Ahn’s criticism of the chaebol is both smart economics and smart politics.
With the US economy currently
growing
at a 1.6% annual rate, a fiscal drag of even 1% implies near-stagnation in 2013, though a modest recovery in housing and manufacturing, together with QE3, should keep US growth at about its current level in 2013.
Otherwise, we can add one more issue to the
growing
list of the Bush administration’s foreign policy failures.
In the wake of the Arab Spring, and amid
growing
unrest among Syrians seeking an end to the brutal Assad regime, the US and France sent their ambassadors to visit Hama in July 2011 to urge unity among the fledgling opposition movement.
Germany is reunited and much of the Third World is
growing
faster than the First World, with computer software built in Bangalore and American graduate programs, including business schools, receiving thousands of application from smart Chinese students.
The over-representation of Western Europe and the under-representation of
growing
developing countries cannot last.
Thirty years after the Islamic revolution, Iranians are
growing
demonstrably less religious and more liberal.
Climate change is also a
growing
concern.
Consequently, maintaining high GDP growth rates requires an ever-increasing volume of credit and a continuously
growing
money supply.
Beyond its massive natural-resource endowments, the continent has a favorable demographic profile (its rapidly
growing
population means that it will soon have the world’s largest workforce) and high urbanization rates.
As a result, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is facing
growing
demands from the country’s well-educated and affluent middle class for greater transparency and accountability in the institutions on which their careers and livelihoods depend.
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