Growing
in sentence
6077 examples of Growing in a sentence
While global leaders expand IMF resources and attempt to coordinate international financial regulation, trade and currency tensions are
growing.
And excessive lending to the corporate sector, particularly in manufacturing, has led to massive excess capacity and a
growing
mountain of bad debt, suppressing growth.
But, while collaboration among governments has helped drive some climate action,
growing
fragmentation within the international community has made the limits of this approach clear.
And, as long as oil prices were
growing
faster than Russian salaries, those in power could still grab a big slice of the profits.
Industrial centers with
growing
unemployment will receive more troops.
On the left, the
growing
working class sought to use political power to change economic relations - to advance more progressive tax policies, or to stop the use of tariffs to protect the old order.
On the contrary, I view the
growing
comfort of government ministers with social media as a matter for celebration.
Much of this rise stems from
growing
prosperity and current-account surpluses in middle-income countries.
With the world’s energy needs growing, how can policymakers guarantee supply?
The Drug War on WomenNEW YORK – When I was
growing
up in communist Poland, International Women’s Day was viewed as an opportunity to celebrate women’s contributions and accomplishments.
Despite its good operating margins,
growing
markets, and prime international clients, the company experienced a drop in liquidity, requiring serious balance-sheet restructuring.
True, according to some estimates, the eurozone economy may now be
growing
at an annual rate of 1.6%, up from 0.9% in the year to the fourth quarter of 2014.
As a recent Johns Hopkins University briefing showed, the Chinese investment destinations of Tanzania, Ghana, and Kenya have been
growing
at annual rates above 6%.
Given China’s
growing
global footprint, an ad hoc approach is no longer appropriate.
Though China is no colonizer, it would be a mistake to assume that its
growing
global footprint is purely benign.
Now, with the support of untold legions – from Nobel Laureates to junior high school kids from East Timor to East Los Angeles – Wikipedia and Connexions have spread around the globe and today are organic,
growing
information bases used by hundreds of millions of people.
According to the UN, the working-age population will stop
growing
in 2015, while the share of the population that is 65 and older will rise to 9.6% (130 million people), up sharply from 6.8% in 2000.
Crisis emerged when world prices of agricultural produce collapsed and surpluses from agriculture could no longer support an inefficient manufacturing industry and
growing
welfare state.
Attempts to shift too much wealth from productive to non-productive sectors led to stagnation in both countries, with
growing
budget deficits, debt, and heavy unemployment.
Two distinct quandaries confront China’s leaders: the first centers on the
growing
demands and dissatisfactions of Chinese society – from peasants and students to white-collar workers and pensioners; the second consists in the country’s conduct of foreign policy.
And yet, formal pronouncements aside, if China’s leadership is to meet
growing
popular demands and quell rising discontent, it will have to commit itself to the rule of law in fact.
As military stalemate looms in Libya, there will be a
growing
temptation to stretch the UN’s legal authority – and the moral and political support that goes with it – to the breaking point, and NATO is now close to that line.
Is the new German law a model for other countries to follow as we grapple with the ethical issues posed by our
growing
knowledge of human genetics?
They will also confront a rapidly changing external environment and a
growing
need to manage capital flows more effectively, which will require much closer coordination between central banks and financial regulators.
What was portrayed during the election campaign as a long-term measure, however dubious, is now portrayed as the medicine needed to keep America’s economy
growing
in the short run.
Countries who try to keep their economies
growing
too fast for too long, using drastic steps such as large tax cuts or highly expansionary monetary policies, frequently end up in a financial mess that takes years to clean up.
This suggests an important advantage of the euro for Germany, where misplaced nostalgia for the deutsche mark -- no doubt aided by the steady invective against the common currency by government officials -- is
growing.
Moreover, D’Agata and Mitchell suggest that the use of so many antibiotics by patients with dementia carries a different kind of cost: it exacerbates the
growing
problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, putting other patients at risk.
The major risk to the sustained role of the dollar is the large and
growing
US national debt.
Given their
growing
footprints on global economics, politics, and the environment, it is now impossible to imagine any major international agreement without China, Japan, and India on board.
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