Growth
in sentence
19851 examples of Growth in a sentence
I believe it will have a highly favorable impact on business investment, raising productivity and overall economic
growth.
The resulting increase in investment would boost
growth
and lower the revenue loss; but congressional Republicans, who favor a revenue-neutral tax reform, would still face a challenge.
Adopting a territorial system would increase investment in the US, stimulating productivity and
growth.
The border tax adjustment therefore pays for about two-thirds of the $190 billion cost of the corporate tax cut, and an even larger share when the lower corporate rate’s favorable effect on
growth
is taken into account.
Growth
in inflation-adjusted US personal consumption expenditures has just been revised down to 1.5% in the second quarter of 2012, and appears to be on track for a similarly anemic increase in the third quarter.
From the first quarter of 2008 through the second quarter of 2012, annualized
growth
in real consumption spending has averaged a mere 0.7% – all the more extraordinary when compared with the pre-crisis trend of 3.6% in the decade ending in 2007.
Liquidity injections into a zero-interest-rate developed world send return-starved investors scrambling for
growth
opportunities elsewhere.
Startups anywhere contribute to job creation, competitiveness, higher productivity, and economic growth, while helping to reduce poverty and fight climate change.
Even well financed entrepreneurs face obstacles to growth, often due to a lack of experience.
Entrepreneurs drive economic
growth
in ways that go far beyond online sales and e-payment solutions.
In time, it is companies like these that will deliver sustainable economic
growth
to the region, and create employment opportunities for millions of people.
Singh’s second principle, often erroneously attributed to Wen, who subsequently repeated it on several occasions, is that “the world has enough space for the
growth
ambitions of both countries.”
Rather, China and Japan should work together to build a new regional architecture for sustained economic
growth
and security.
If economic
growth
remains on its current trajectory, with no major reforms, more than one-third of the population will remain below the empowerment line in 2022, with 12% still trapped in extreme poverty.
To avoid such an outcome, India’s government should pursue a set of bold reforms that boost
growth
by encouraging businesses to invest, scale up, and hire.
Jobs and productivity
growth
could contribute 75% of the potential gains, while increased public spending alone, without measures to improve its effectiveness, would contribute less than 10%.
Mexico’s essential problem in achieving accelerated economic
growth
lies elsewhere.
Government after government has prioritized the preservation of corporatist loyalties over the promotion of economic
growth
and emphasized clientelist distribution over entrepreneurial innovation and creation of level economic playing field.
Mexico is trapped by a dense network of rent-seekers and monopolies in sectors that are crucial for economic growth, including telecommunications, energy, transportation, and financial services.
As the new book No
Growth
Without Equity?
The results have become increasingly obvious and painful: an economy that has suffered more severely in the global crisis than its neighbors to the south; a rent-seeking business elite that is unaccustomed to competition; public and private monopolies that no one seems to have the political will to dismantle; and corporatist pacts that siphon off public resources to unproductive unions, thwarting productivity and
growth.
The Trouble with China’s Troubled-Asset ReliefBEIJING – Back in 2009, in the midst of the global recession, China’s government launched a massive economic-stimulus package that bolstered GDP
growth
by fueling a surge in bank lending.
The New PhilosophersPRINCETON – At the recent meeting of G-20 finance ministers in Australia, US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew noted “philosophical differences with some of our friends in Europe,” before urging Europeans to do more to boost their anemic
growth
rate.
The real cost of ambitious, early, and large carbon-cutting programs would be a reduction in
growth
– particularly damaging to the world’s poor – to the tune of around $40 trillion a year.
A new WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement would benefit all by increasing developing countries’ capacity to trade, strengthening the WTO’s development mandate, and boosting global economic
growth.
Meanwhile, the US, in the grips of stagflation in the late 1970s, was eager to seek new
growth
solutions; low-cost Chinese imports were the antidote for income-constrained American consumers.
China was the first to embrace change – committing to an economic rebalancing by shifting its
growth
model from external to internal demand, from exports and investment to private consumption.
Moreover, while China’s nascent consumer-led
growth
dynamic is impressive by most standards, limited market access has constrained US companies from capturing what they judge to be a fair market share of the potential bonanza.
The US remains stuck in the time-worn mindset of a deficit saver with massive multilateral trade deficits and the need to draw freely on global surplus saving to support economic
growth.
The US and China both need innovation-led economies for their own purposes – in codependency terms, for their own personal
growth.
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