Growth
in sentence
19851 examples of Growth in a sentence
Far from boosting consumption, as intended, monetary stimulus may create an environment that dampens demand, weakening prospects for economic
growth.
Doing nothing will only constrain the region’s tremendous potential to achieve sustainable and inclusive
growth.
As a result, economic
growth
and job creation remain lackluster, with the availability of investment finance for long-term productive assets – essential to sustainable
growth
– severely limited.
In fact, at the recent G-20 meeting, the World Bank presented an Umbrella Report on Long-Term Investment Financing for
Growth
and Development.
For decades, health-care spending has increased faster than economic
growth
by an average of two percentage points in OECD countries.
They strengthen local infrastructure, improve education, create jobs, and drive economic
growth.
America the RecklessMILAN – The world’s developed countries face
growth
and employment shortfalls, while developing countries are confronting huge challenges in adapting to increasingly volatile capital flows while adjusting their
growth
patterns to sustain economic development.
Setting aside the external impact on the global economy, the damage to domestic stability and
growth
from anything other than a short-term technical default would be so severe that the political system (and both parties with it) could not withstand the backlash.
And this comes at a time when many (including me) believe that strengthening US economic
growth
makes an orderly withdrawal from policy-assisted
growth
the wise course, both domestically and internationally.
In the case of a US default, however, it would start to attract capital inflows, causing the euro to rise, adding to already-substantial headwinds to
growth
and employment, and making recovery in its damaged peripheral economies nearly impossible.
The global economy faces tremendous trials in the coming years: growth, employment, and distributional challenges in many advanced and developing countries; far-reaching institutional reform in Europe; the complex middle-income transition in China; and the continuing need to reduce poverty worldwide.
Initially, central bankers were keen to cultivate this romance as a means of meeting their broader policy objectives of growth, employment, stable inflation, and financial stability.
Though it has lagged behind the privatization of military services, the privatization of intelligence expanded dramatically with the
growth
in intelligence activities after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the US.
Latin America’s Irrational ExuberanceMONTEVIDEO – Latin America is coming to the end of an extraordinary cycle of
growth
that has transformed much of the continent, especially its commodity-exporting countries.
From 2004 to 2011 (excluding the crisis year of 2009), the region almost doubled its long-run average
growth
rate.
Faster economic growth, rising incomes, and wealth redistribution over the past decade – fueled by sound macroeconomic policies, foreign investment, and rocketing commodity prices – have helped to reduce poverty rates by 13 percentage points, and extreme poverty by five percentage points.
Once foreign investment and higher commodity export prices are excluded from the
growth
calculations, Latin America’s recent economic performance barely exceeds its unexceptional historical average.
If this scenario is to be avoided, political leaders must take a long view of economic
growth.
If a good education remains the preserve of the elite, no amount of irrational exuberance will be able to mask the long-term threat to economic
growth
and political stability.
But, while doing so, they are not likely to be expanding private-sector lending to support economic
growth.
According to this view, the system is unreformable, and real change will be possible only after it finally collapses, perhaps owing to fiscal weakness, since the combination of deficit-financed transfers, low growth, and low labor-market participation may prove unsustainable.
The Communist Party has based its legitimacy not only on a high rate of economic growth, but also on appeals to nationalism.
In a new study that surveys and updates the economics literature, Arvind Subramanian, Olivier Jeanne, and John Williamson conclude that “the international community should not seek to promote totally free trade in assets – even over the long run – because…free capital mobility seems to have little benefit in terms of long-run growth.”
For example, the new welfare economics of capital controls views unstable capital flows as negative externalities on recipient countries, which implies that regulations on cross-border flows are the optimal tools to address market failures, improve market functioning, and enhance growth, not worsen it.
Itau, Latin America’s largest bank, is predicting GDP
growth
in Argentina of only 3.2% next year, down sharply from 6% in 2011.
The country’s
growth
slowdown and mounting financial risks have spurred a growing wave of pessimism, with economists worldwide warning of an impending crash.
After the period of rapid economic
growth
ended, Europe’s leaders came to rely, instead, on the threat of an evil that is greater than austerity: further destabilization of debtor countries, leading to default, expulsion from the eurozone, and economic, social, and political collapse.
After all, in the past, increases and decreases in the
growth
rate of the monetary base (currency in circulation plus commercial banks’ reserves held at the central bank) produced – or at least were accompanied by – rises and falls in the inflation rate.
This decelerating monetary
growth
was accompanied by a slowdown in the pace of inflation.
The party is not over yet: global
growth
is expected to continue in 2019 and 2020, though at a slower pace.
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