Imbalances
in sentence
916 examples of Imbalances in a sentence
Certain diseases, growths in the thryoid or chemical
imbalances
in the body can confuse the organ and make it deaf to the pituitary's guiding commands.
How do we deal with gender
imbalances
and power dynamics in the workplace?
This is why one of the leading doctors at the United Nations, in their official statement for World Health Day, couple of years back in 2017, said we need to talk less about chemical
imbalances
and more about the
imbalances
in the way we live.
Showing no appreciation of the time-honored linkage between trade deficits and macroeconomic saving-investment imbalances, the president continues to fixate on bilateral solutions to a multilateral problem – in effect, blaming China for America’s merchandise trade deficits with 102 countries.
Excessive external imbalances, they also argue, should be monitored and perhaps fought in a coordinated way.
After all, there are no instruments to enforce strict rules at the global level, and the unwinding of today’s global
imbalances
– led by some revaluation of the renminbi and China’s shift to a growth model based on stronger domestic demand – might be only a matter of time.
Europe’s internal imbalances, however, are a much knottier problem.
This bit of statistical legerdemain reflects the political sensitivity of Europe’s current-account imbalances, which stems from eurozone members’ inability to rely on the exchange rate to restore equilibrium.
Both the EU Commission and the European Central Bank argue that macroeconomic
imbalances
in Europe are largely the result of widening competitiveness disparities.
And, of course, the political sensitivity of Europe’s
imbalances
consists precisely in telling deficit countries that they must accept enduring hard times while surplus countries are required merely to save a little less.
It is not necessarily the cause of Europe’s internal imbalances, but it may be the cure.
In this respect, the recent Basel III preliminary agreement and the establishment of new European financial supervisory structures might be more important for correcting and preventing external
imbalances
than recent plans by the EU to extend economic surveillance of member countries – and even to impose sanctions to enforce non-fiscal macroeconomic targets.
The immediate problem, of course, is to correct today’s
imbalances.
The global economic crisis has merely helped to mask chronic structural
imbalances
within the region.
Third, global
imbalances
led to cheap money.
Moreover, while global
imbalances
were immediately reduced in the course of the initial crisis, with the US adjusting its deficit relatively rapidly, they are now re-emerging.
But the growth returns have dwindled, while
imbalances
have worsened.
But it sustains considerable economic imbalances, which are undermining its ability to achieve high-income status.
But, over the last year, China’s
imbalances
returned with a vengeance.
But discussions of the Chinese economy’s
imbalances
and vulnerabilities tend to neglect some of the more positive elements of its structural evolution, particularly the government’s track record of prompt corrective intervention, and the substantial state balance sheet that can be deployed, if necessary.
Japan and Germany are among the countries with extreme generational imbalances, along with Italy, Brazil and the Netherlands.
Norway, Portugal, Argentina, Belgium and America all have substantial imbalances, imposing a 50 % to 75% increase in net lifetime taxes for future generations through their current fiscal policies.
Demographics is the primary cause of generational
imbalances.
If demographics did not play a role, a large majority of countries, including Germany, the United States, Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands, France, Norway, and Argentina would not have generational imbalances; they might even record a surplus.
As a result, generational
imbalances
- and the lifetime net taxes of future generations - will continue to pile up, until the tax burden will be too heavy to be imposed.
The primacy of static solidarity is due to an aging population, which, along with slower growth, has led to structural fiscal
imbalances.
Deeper fiscal surveillance should be matched by broader economic surveillance, especially since current-account
imbalances
have become more acute during the crisis.
The European Commission is now working on extending the focus of surveillance beyond fiscal policy so that we can identify risks stemming from macroeconomic
imbalances
or changes in competitiveness and address them before they become entrenched.
Many of us worried that the
imbalances
were unsustainable, and might end in a “hard landing” for the dollar if and when global investors tired of holding it.
The most dangerous trends, including the upsurge of global
imbalances
and the dramatic financialization of the economy, accelerated dangerously from about 2004 onwards.
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