Markets
in sentence
9395 examples of Markets in a sentence
Land registration systems introduced in Africa conflicted with local customs, ignored soil conditions, and rarely led to the emergence of viable real estate
markets.
Perhaps the effectiveness of legal institutions in developing countries and emerging
markets
is not the only goal.
When sub-Saharan African countries gained independence in the late 1950’s and early 1960’s, their leaders inherited bankrupt states with no access to international capital
markets.
Moreover, trade unions continue to weaken, while globalization has led to cheap production of labor-intensive goods in China and other emerging markets, depressing the wages and job prospects of unskilled workers in advanced economies.
With America turning away from its global role of borrower of last resort, the rest of us will need to sharpen our competitive edge to sell in other
markets.
Speculators could have “front run” the bank in the markets, selling short, driving equity prices down, and forcing the French financial institution to sell into a bottomless pit.
Is a forced bankruptcy in extremely fragile global financial
markets
what the French government wanted for Société Générale?
On the other hand, if policymakers maintain the stimulus for too long, runaway fiscal deficits may lead to a sovereign debt crisis
(markets
are already punishing fiscally undisciplined countries with larger sovereign spreads).
Fifth, in countries where private-sector deleveraging is very rapid via a fall in private consumption and private investment, the fiscal stimulus should be maintained and extended, as long as financial
markets
do not perceive those deficits as unsustainable.
Such an outcome would cause another bout of severe systemic risk in global financial markets, trigger a series of contagious sovereign defaults, and severely damage the growth prospects of emerging-market economies that have so far experienced a more robust recovery than advanced countries.
The rise in oil prices at the beginning of the century gave the economy an artificial boost, leading Goldman Sachs to include it among the world’s major emerging
markets
(one of the “BRICs,” along with Brazil, India, and China).
UK exporters would end up participating less in the large EU market, and they would be shut out of EU-negotiated agreements ensuring access to major international
markets.
The Fed and the Bank of England remain less likely to be concerned about the emergence of new kinds of asset bubbles in stock
markets
or commodities.
That may be an ambitious goal, but it is achievable, especially if Brazil becomes more deeply integrated into global
markets
and multinational production networks.
But there is a fundamental difference between developed European countries and emerging markets: the size of the informal sector, from which VAT is not collected.
China 2030 calls for structural reforms that would redefine the role of government, overhaul state-owned enterprises and banks, develop the private sector, promote competition, and deepen liberalization of the land, labor, and financial
markets.
In the financial sector, the banking system must be commercialized, thereby gradually allowing interest rates to be set by market forces, while capital
markets
must be deepened in tandem with the development of the legal and supervisory infrastructure needed to ensure financial stability.
The US, until then a net creditor to the world, became a net borrower, with China and other emerging
markets
benefiting from America’s rising trade deficit.
To paraphrase Dylan Thomas, we believers in
markets
should not go gently into the populist night.
Equity
markets
in other developing countries also witnessed similar dramatic increases during this period.
Many emerging
markets
recognized the dangers and tried to reduce capital inflows.
Markets
for innovation and new ideas work poorly and governments can help to address those market failures.
The story is similar in many emerging
markets.
The “Remain” campaign focused on the economic benefits of staying in the European Union and the costs of leaving, some of which fell due immediately after the results were announced: the British pound plummeted and stock
markets
wiped out a couple of trillion dollars of wealth.
By contrast, when the Industrial Revolution increased the value of larger markets, Italy (1861-1871) and Germany (1870-1871) were created by unifying smaller states on the basis of nationalist sentiment and a common language, both of which actually had to be created.
A Europe of
markets
and money, not of man and morals, dominated the project.
Values must be the road that leads to what cannot be reached by
markets
and institutions alone - the accession of Europe's citizens to the European Union.
Spin and frothy
markets
aside, the healing has only just begun.
More aid (including debt relief) and greater access to rich countries’
markets
for poor countries’ products now appears to be at the top of the global agenda.
Obviously, both countries would be considerably poorer without access to foreign
markets.
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