Housing
in sentence
1603 examples of Housing in a sentence
Currently, anyone who moves to another part of the country without a hukou risks losing access to education, social services, and the
housing
market.
This is where the wealth effects of now-rebounding
housing
prices and a surging stock market come into play.
Yet America’s macroeconomic situation seems worse than Europe’s in terms of consumption, banking, or employment and
housing
markets.
This is the view heard most frequently from the political right – for example, from people who think that the main problem in the run-up to the financial meltdown of 2008 was government
housing
policies.
And there is a widening disparity between real-estate prices in China's thriving first- and second-tier cities and its lagging third- and fourth-tier cities (though higher household incomes in the former make
housing
there more affordable).
The authorities are taking strong action to curb pollution, improve energy efficiency, implement pension reform, and expand access to health care and low-cost
housing.
Policies and programs to promote inclusion in employment, education, health care, and
housing
must be implemented at the local and national levels.
In 2009, the EU endorsed the principle of “explicit but not exclusive targeting” for Roma, and the European Commission allowed structural funds to be used to cover
housing
interventions in favour of marginalized communities, with a particular focus on Roma.
Segregated
housing
has led to huge shantytowns and settlements lacking sanitation and other basic conditions essential to a life with dignity.
A tradition of conservative banking regulation and a tough-minded Governor of the Reserve Bank (India’s central bank) ensured that Indian banks did not acquire the toxic debts flowing from sub-prime loans, credit-default swaps, and over-inflated
housing
prices that assailed Western banks.
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.
Similar comments were made about the US Federal Reserve in 2008, after it began large-scale purchases of non-conventional assets, including agency debt and mortgage-backed securities, in order to support the collapsing US
housing
market.
There are obvious risks: non-conventional monetary policy might be considered a sort of fiscal policy, in which the central bank is allocating or redistributing resources to a particular constituency: the
housing
market in the case of the US, or recipients of government largesse in the European case.
If that were not enough to ward off disaster, the government could purchase unsold properties and use them for social
housing.
Real-estate bubbles can be contained through regulatory means, such as loan-to-value or loan-to-income ceilings for
housing
loans.
In the case of Greece, the saving of businesses and households exceeds the level of investment in businesses and
housing
by just enough to outweigh the dissaving by the government, resulting in a very small current-account surplus.
Intervention may be needed in fragile sectors of the US economy, like housing, where faltering performance could produce another downturn.
Imports of inexpensive Chinese products freed up capital and labor in the US for a dramatic expansion of the
housing
stock – which led to a sharp rise in the American standard of living.
This powerful consumer base will demand the products – such as housing, appliances, automobiles, and computers – that European consumers demanded over the last 50 years.
For starters, the roof is starting to collapse on the global
housing
bubble, as
housing
markets begin to freeze up not only in the United States, but also in many other countries, such as high-flying Spain.
According to my own calculations in a series of research papers with Maurice Obstfeld, the trade-weighted dollar would likely fall by 20% if a global demand shift (say, due to a US
housing
recession) were to cut the US trade deficit in half.
But, but instead of supplying the population with the necessary infrastructure – economic development, education, welfare, medical services, housing, and refugee rehabilitation – Yasser Arafat’s Fatah-led PA spent more than 70% of its meager budget on a dozen competing security and intelligence services, neglecting all other spheres of activity.
But the first priority is not to knock down those homes (in an effort to consolidate the
housing
market); it is to ensure that resources are allocated efficiently in the future.
The Energy InternetVIENNA – In the next 20 years, almost three billion people will join the middle class, propelling global demand for more and better housing, televisions, cars, food, water, energy, and myriad other goods and services.
And the government will spend more on low-income
housing
and to expand health-care services.
Indeed, the only reason that America’s current-account deficit was lower in 2010 than in previous years is that investment in
housing
and other construction declined sharply.
If Americans’ demand for
housing
picks up and businesses want to increase their investment, a clash between China’s lower saving rate and a continued high fiscal deficit in the US could drive up global interest rates significantly.
People aren't fighting over scarce
housing
or lucrative jobs.
This money could then help to finance the additional health care, education, and low-income
housing
required by new migrants.
In 2006 and 2007, Peru’s
housing
minister used government advertising contracts to tilt coverage of his ministry and himself in national newspapers.
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