Markets
in sentence
9395 examples of Markets in a sentence
The ensuing tit-for-tat will hinder global economic growth, and damage economies and
markets
everywhere.
His erratic foreign policies are spooking world leaders, multinational corporations, and global
markets
generally.
Markets
are already becoming wary; full-blown panic is likely if protectionism and reckless, politicized monetary policy precipitate trade, currency, and capital-control wars.
But, as the vacillation in financial
markets
since Trump’s inauguration indicates, the president’s inconsistent, erratic, and destructive policies will take their toll on domestic and global economic growth in the long run.
In the same week, Iran also released five American prisoners; exported enriched uranium, in accordance with the nuclear deal; and reentered world petroleum
markets.
First and foremost, it would reconcile a large state balance sheet with an expanding role for markets, bolstering employment, stimulating innovation, and advancing the economy’s structural transformation.
Furthermore, the diversification of China’s asset holdings would deepen its financial
markets
considerably.
Debt
markets
would also benefit from such an initiative.
Blurring the line between the private and the state-owned sectors would, over time, reduce the latter’s privileged access to – and overuse of – bank financing, leading to the expansion of corporate bond
markets.
This, along with enhanced enforcement of competition law, would go a long way toward leveling the playing field in
markets.
China does not have to give up the safety net provided by large asset holdings to allow
markets
to play a decisive microeconomic role.
With US military spending slowing and other export
markets
remaining tight, American defense firms are eager to expand sales to India, which is now the world’s largest arms importer.
When the Greek crisis raised the specter of default, financial
markets
reacted with a vengeance, relegating all heavily indebted eurozone members to the status of a Third World country over-extended in a foreign currency.
Their exports would become less competitive, and they would encounter heavy competition from the rump eurozone in their home
markets.
Propelled by demand and outsourcing from advanced economies, emerging
markets
won a growing share of the soaring trade in goods; by 2014, they accounted for more than half of global trade flows.
Digital connections promote productivity growth; indeed, they can help developing economies move to the productivity frontier by exposing their business sectors to ideas, research, technologies, and best management and operational practices, and by building new channels to serve large global
markets.
The objective was to bring digital oversight to two major
markets
– the Asia-Pacific (under the TTP) and the European Union (under the TTIP) – as an important first step toward global rules in these areas.
Yet financial
markets
are not pricing dollar depreciation and a rise in long-term US interest rates accordingly.
Specifically, the proliferation of global value chains has enabled powerful multinational firms to control the design, production, and distribution of traded goods and services, even as various segments are outsourced to smaller firms far from final
markets.
We need to restore order to international financial
markets.
The Black Sea is poised to become a key conduit for non-OPEC, non-Gulf oil and natural gas flowing into European
markets
and beyond.
In the short run, the economy needs confidence-boosting measures to stabilize financial
markets.
Sooner or later, economic pressures will force Turkey to adopt fixes that will stabilize its currency and financial
markets.
Moreover, there are often legitimate reasons for intervening in foreign-exchange
markets.
Though financial
markets
have grown skittish at the prospect that Italy’s new leaders could drive their country out of the eurozone, polling conducted after the election in March showed that 60-72% of Italians would not support such a move.
The Fund has no instrument to provide short-term liquidity to emerging
markets
facing capital volatility.
This would make emerging
markets
and developing country members regard reserve accumulation as expensive and extravagant, thereby helping to liberate those resources to help the world economy overcome today’s crisis.
After all, if the crisis in financial
markets
continues and combines with a dramatic slump in the real economy, the EU could quickly be at risk if it cannot respond politically.
Finally, one must remember that short-term movements in foreign-exchange
markets
are no way to judge a currency’s underlying strength.
The longer he maintains such policies, the more likely it is that
markets
will gradually move toward alternatives to the dollar.
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