Incomes
in sentence
1233 examples of Incomes in a sentence
If this new, lower growth rate persists, by 2021 average
incomes
in the US will be 16% lower than they would have been had the US maintained the roughly 2% annual productivity gain experienced since 1945.
The rise of populism is in part a response to stagnating
incomes
and job loss, owing mostly to new technologies but widely attributed to imports and immigrants.
For individuals, it can boost
incomes
and make everyday life more convenient.
This could, according to research conducted by the Peterson Institute, boost US
incomes
by 0.4% – roughly $77 billion a year.
Britain’s once-vaunted civil service has also atrophied since the 1970s, and technocratic leaders would have seen immediately that Europe’s inhumane and counterproductive post-crisis austerity policies could not create jobs, raise incomes, generate taxes, or boost consumption.
Little wonder, then, that ordinary citizens consider a recession over only when the economy has returned to “normal,” which means that
incomes
are rising and jobs are no longer desperately scarce.
Those among the native population with the lowest
incomes
and education levels will always be worse off, if they have to compete with a large number of young male immigrants.
In a high-growth environment, with rising
incomes
for almost everyone, people will accept rising inequality up to a point, particularly if it occurs in a context that is substantially meritocratic.
Improved access to higher education would broaden horizons, inoculate against populism, and boost
incomes.
The poor, meanwhile, need a fair shot at raising their
incomes.
Studies show that helping women access trade and grow businesses helps create jobs and boost incomes.”
But on Planet Worst, forcing terrified, uneducated women to remain at home is more socially acceptable than facing the fact that this means choosing to drag down
incomes
for everyone.
When private
incomes
fall, so do public revenues.
But, more importantly, when private
incomes
fall, government social-welfare expenditures rise, sparking a recovery in demand, output, investment, and employment.
But fiscal-policy progressives, in particular, remain fixated on using higher tax rates on the wealthy to fund higher
incomes
for everyone else.
The rising stock market and the higher value of homes induced individuals to consume more of their
incomes
and to save less.
Although average
incomes
have risen very rapidly in recent decades, they still stand at between one-seventh and one-eighth the levels in the United States – lower than in Turkey or Colombia and not much higher than in El Salvador or Egypt.
Average
incomes
have increased by 25% over the last decade – a far cry from the zero growth of the past.
Commodity-price booms are usually associated with rising incomes, stronger fiscal positions, appreciating currencies, declining borrowing costs, and capital inflows.
To take one example, in Niger, education and improved farming techniques helped double real farm
incomes
for more than one million people, while restoring huge tracts of severely degraded land.
Average
incomes
are amongst the lowest in the world.
In Central and Eastern Europe, foreign banks extended euro- and Swiss franc-denominated corporate, home, and car loans to firms and households with
incomes
in local currency, which added to corporate and household financial distress when local currencies tanked.
Even the world’s middle classes are feeling the squeeze of falling
incomes
and opportunities.
The more competitive exchange rate raised the profits of Japanese exporters, but not their output, while the weaker yen also raised import prices, reducing the real
incomes
of most Japanese households.
As a result, government expenditures and household
incomes
are up substantially since Saddam Hussein’s last years in power.
As traditional jobs disappear, new services areas are springing up to yield high
incomes.
For two decades prior to the 2008 crisis, employment levels were maintained – and downward pressure on
incomes
mitigated – by creating jobs in non-tradable sectors.
In the interest of social cohesion, market outcomes need to be modified to create a more even distribution of
incomes
and benefits, both now and in inter-temporal terms.
Weakening developing-economy
incomes
further is a global demand slowdown and commodities crash, which, as Nobel laureate Angus Deaton has demonstrated, has been disastrous for most of the developing world.
Both work in practice like a wage subsidy for those with low incomes, cutting poverty – particularly among women with young children – while strengthening incentives to work.
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