Incomes
in sentence
1233 examples of Incomes in a sentence
Falling employment lowers wage and salary
incomes.
The higher prices of food and energy depress real
incomes
further.
The basic idea is that, when comparing
incomes
across countries, variations in purchasing power should be taken into account.
Hence, their real per capita
incomes
are lower relative to other countries.
Indeed, people in Beijing and Delhi are showing more equanimity than most would if their
incomes
were cut by 40%.
His corrupt cronies and military officials who benefitted during his lawless regime stand by him - not only to preserve their own corrupt incomes, but also out of fear of the retribution that might follow their fall from power.
Maintaining these countries’ excessive prices and nominal
incomes
with artificially cheap credit guaranteed by other countries would only make the loss of competitiveness permanent.
As it stands, the British, like their counterparts elsewhere in Europe, feel overtaxed for spotty public services that are constantly being cut, and are angry that their
incomes
have been falling for the last five years.
Between now and May, Cameron must persuade voters that the British economy will continue to perform strongly, fueling an increase in real
incomes.
Income inequality is on the rise, with the top 1% holding a vastly disproportionate amount of wealth, while middle- and lower-class
incomes
remain largely stagnant.
One tier will be populated by fully employed high-skill workers with generous employer-provided (and tax-advantaged) benefits, as well as high-skill individuals who finance their own benefits from high
incomes
earned as independent contractors or from self-employment.
But unskilled workers’
incomes
are not keeping pace with overall economic growth, and the resulting social strains are a ticking bomb.
Benign disinflation means rising real
incomes
for lenders, pensioners, and workers, and falling energy prices for industry.
Shortly after the war, the US government faced a new set of challenges – reintegrating returning service members, responding to the growing threat from the Soviet Union, and rebuilding a devastated Europe – that it prioritized over individual
incomes.
Should wages and
incomes
be more fairly distributed, especially in light of climate change, a problem that will affect everyone to which a small minority contributes disproportionately?
At the same time, other types of policies that change incentives or remove barriers can lead to increased employment and higher real incomes, without raising wage and price inflation.
First, for some individuals, working fewer hours reduces
incomes
enough to entitle them to a larger government subsidy for health insurance.
But when a government does that, output and
incomes
decline, unemployment increases, and the ability to repay may actually decrease.
With higher incomes, rising meat consumption requires more grain for animal feed.
Finally, and most important, the magnitude and duration of the drop in aggregate demand has been greater than expected, partly because employment and median
incomes
have been lagging behind growth.
The stagnation of
incomes
in the bottom 75% of the distribution presents an especially large challenge, because it depresses consumption, undermines social cohesion (and thus political stability and effectiveness), and decreases intergenerational mobility – especially where public education is poor.
If the relationship between average
incomes
and house prices is stable, then economic fundamentals clearly have the potential to explain prices.
In Europe, the average ratio of home prices to
incomes
is slightly below its long-term average, mainly because housing prices in Germany are at historically low levels by this measure.
In fact, it is the rapid acceleration of economic growth in the major emerging countries that has reduced poverty, not only directly, through jobs and higher incomes, but also by generating the revenues governments need to undertake the public-health, education, and other programs that sustain poverty reduction – and growth – in the long term.
The managerial state has assumed responsibility for looking after everything from the
incomes
of the middle class to the profitability of large corporations to industrial advancement.
The results so far have been mixed, as inadequate funding of a social safety net continues to temper the support to household
incomes
provided by services-driven job creation and urbanization-led increases in real wages.
Standards of living fall,
incomes
stagnate, hopes are dampened.
The two main factors driving that increase were the expansion of credit and the rapid rise in resources devoted to asset management (associated, not coincidentally, with the exponential growth in financial-sector incomes).
The main focus will be the lagging wages of rural workers, whose per capita
incomes
are currently only 30% of those in urban areas – precisely the opposite of China’s aspirations for a more “harmonious society.”
It must also contend with significant fiscal drag, ongoing deleveraging in the household sector (amid weak job creation, stagnant incomes, and persistent downward pressure on real estate and financial wealth), rising inequality, and political gridlock.
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