Growth
in sentence
19851 examples of Growth in a sentence
Population alone is not a source of power unless those human resources are developed, and India has lagged well behind China in terms of literacy and economic
growth.
The IMF has raised its forecast for eurozone
growth
this year to 1.2%.
But now that
growth
in emerging markets has slowed, their export markets are weakening.
Mental health services should offer something more than having our feelings chemically suppressed, or having our children’s difficulties sitting still controlled by amphetamines (which, apart from teaching children that problems are best solved with drugs, stunt
growth
by an average of one centimeter per year).
The convulsions in the clean-tech sector are simply symptoms of a cycle that characterizes emerging technologies: excitement, inflated expectations, and consolidation – ultimately followed by stability and the resumption of
growth.
To save the euro – which is essential, because the European project’s fate depends on the success of monetary union – Europe needs action now: in addition to indispensable austerity measures and structural reforms, there is no way to succeed without a viable economic program that will assure
growth.
If Merkel’s government believes that paying lip service to
growth
is enough, it is playing with fire: a euro collapse in which not only Germans would be badly burned.
As different interest groups and factions unite against a common foe, President Xi Jinping will gain even more political capital, facilitating the shift from export-led economic
growth
to a trade-neutral model.
For example, political obstacles to comprehensive economic policymaking in many advanced economies have undermined the implementation of structural reforms and responsive fiscal policies in recent years, holding back business investment, undermining productivity growth, worsening inequality, and threatening future potential
growth.
In the short term, the world economy would face slower economic
growth
and the risk of greater financial instability.
By stifling economic growth, inadequate land-tenure systems perpetuate poverty and marginalization.
But the opposite is also true: strong, properly enforced land rights can boost growth, reduce poverty, strengthen human capital, promote economic fairness (including gender equity), and support social progress more broadly.
Resilient IndiaNEW DELHI – With the world’s most developed economies reeling under the incubus of what is already being called the Great Recession, India at the beginning of the year took stock and issued a revised estimate for GDP
growth
in the 2008-2009 fiscal year.
Even the pessimists are speaking only of lower positive
growth.
This is quite a turnabout for an economy that for years had crept along at what was derisively called the “Hindu rate of growth” – around 3% – while much of the rest of Asia shot ahead.
The country has visibly prospered, and, despite population growth, per capita income has grown faster than ever before.
First, India has considerable resources of its own to put towards growth, and has proven itself skilled at the art of channelling domestic savings into productive investments.
Second, once things have begun to stabilize in the West, investors looking for a place to put their money will look anew at India, owing to the opportunities for
growth
and the sheer size of the market.
Today, Venezuela’s economy is a full-blown disaster, with the collapse in
growth
and near-hyperinflation causing widespread human suffering.
Religion’s largest
growth
is in China.
In 2012, this
growth
began to wane – and so did Putin’s popularity.
With the economy showing no sign of recovering the robust
growth
rates that had bolstered Putin’s popularity in the past, regaining support would have required undertaking the daunting task of fulfilling citizens’ demands for better education, improved health-care services, and more affordable housing.
The budget deficit is 8% of GDP; the current account deficit comes to 4% in a year where
growth
is near zero.
In fact, a more honest, transparent global system free of corruption would support stronger, more inclusive economic
growth
and development.
If continued low
growth
and low inflation do not justify rapid interest-rate increases, a hawkish Fed that raises rates anyway will face harsh disciplining by the market – and, by extension, so will Trump.
Trump’s proposed policy mix would also have an ambiguous – and modest – impact on growth, if he appoints hawks to the Fed.
Looser fiscal policy would help short-term economic growth; but tighter monetary policy would undercut those gains.
Central Banks Must Work Together – or Suffer AloneNEW YORK – Global
growth
seems to be moving, slowly but surely, along the path to recovery.
The International Monetary Fund’s latest World Economic Outlook predicts 3.5% global
growth
this year, up from 3.2% last year.
But there’s a hitch: the easy monetary policies that have largely enabled economies to return to
growth
are reaching their limits, and now threaten to disrupt the recovery by creating the conditions for another financial crisis.
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