Imbalances
in sentence
916 examples of Imbalances in a sentence
Payment
imbalances
between Federal Reserve districts thus cannot represent
imbalances
between states.
Across China’s government, a quiet but resolute commitment to fostering a new growth model that corrects the distortions created by decades of double-digit growth – including corruption, pollution, rising inequality, and other structural
imbalances
– is taking root.
On the contrary, the longer Greenspan plays down America’s dangerous macroeconomic
imbalances
with happy talk, the more damage they will ultimately inflict on the global economy.
Simply put, there must be dollar depreciation to keep global
imbalances
in check.
Unlike the deficit-prone emerging economies that are now in trouble – whose
imbalances
are strikingly reminiscent of those in the Asian economies that were hit by the late-1990’s financial crisis – China runs a current-account surplus.
But the key issues lingering in the minds of the G-20 leaders will be exchange rates and global
imbalances.
The Kyeongju meeting decided that the G-20 countries would move toward market-determined exchange rates and pursue “politics conducive to reducing excessive
imbalances
and maintaining current-account
imbalances
at sustainable levels.”
If G-20 leaders can reach specific and effective agreements on exchange rates and global
imbalances
without overshadowing other issues, the prospects for a soft-landing for the global economy will improve greatly.
For Eastern Europe, this boils down to four major areas: (1) an overdependence on natural resources; (2) export imbalances, in terms of product mix and foreign markets; (3) small, inadequate capital markets; and (4) inefficient production and use of energy.
As in the 1970's and the 1980's, the rising Asian currency is seen as a much greater threat because that is where the biggest trade
imbalances
lie.
Despite strenuous debate about currency issues and trade
imbalances
at its summit in Seoul in November, the sole area of agreement concerned an issue on the G-20’s agenda for the first time – economic development.
If there is a consensus on one issue, it is the impossibility of understanding the bubble and the crash without considering the role of global
imbalances.
Preventing future crises similar to this one therefore requires resolving the problem of global
imbalances.
Whether there is a permanent reduction in global
imbalances
will depend mainly on decisions taken outside the US, specifically in countries like China.
If this view is correct, we can expect to see global
imbalances
re-emerge once the recession is over and to unwind only slowly thereafter.
The other view is that China contributed to global
imbalances
not through its merchandise exports, but through its capital exports.
This interpretation again implies the re-emergence of global
imbalances
once the recession ends, and their very gradual unwinding thereafter.
The answer lies in France and Germany, where, a decade after the 2008 financial crash exposed the eurozone’s design flaws, there is still no consensus about how to manage the large-scale insolvencies that are inevitable in a currency union lacking any mechanism to temper financial flows and trade
imbalances.
The tremendous growth in global current-account
imbalances
magnified problems that led to the financial crisis.
Undetected
imbalances
and systemic risk make fiscal policies seem prudent when they are not.
But that doesn’t deal with global
imbalances
and other contributors to and signs of instability.
Dig deeper, and one finds that the economy’s foundations are plagued with fragilities and
imbalances.
Yes, by our standards, China’s
imbalances
are unstable and unsustainable.
Much of the discussion in the period following the 2008 financial crisis focused on various economic
imbalances
that either threatened or impeded growth.
These large foreign-exchange reserves are no longer held to buffer temporary trade
imbalances.
The bad news is that the framework of negotiations is flawed: A deal with any one country will do little to resolve America’s fundamental economic
imbalances
that have arisen in an interconnected world.
But he must also provide some real evidence that China is opening its markets as domestic consumption grows, and that it recognizes that a sustainable global recovery requires adjustments in China as well as America to redress international
imbalances.
As external
imbalances
grow larger, each phase of this cycle becomes more painful.
The real heroes of the world economy – the role models that others should emulate – are countries that have done relatively well while running only small external
imbalances.
BUENOS AIRES – Today’s global currency war resembles real war in two important respects: a face-off over the structural
imbalances
between two large opponents – China and the United States – has forced uncomfortable smaller allies to take one side or the other, and third parties that may not be directly engaged are suffering collateral damage from both sides of the dispute.
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