Markets
in sentence
9395 examples of Markets in a sentence
When Bear Stearns’ creditors were bailed out to the tune of $30 billion in March, the rally in equity, money, and credit
markets
lasted eight weeks.
Then, when the $700 billion US rescue package was approved,
markets
fell another 7% in two days.
As authorities in the US and abroad took ever more radical policy steps from October 6-9, stock, credit, and money
markets
fell further, day after day.
They don’t borrow on capital
markets.
According to the positive narrative about emerging markets, industrialization, urbanization, per capita income growth, and the rise of a middle-class consumer society were supposed to boost long-term economic and sociopolitical stability.
Indeed, rising income and wealth inequality in many emerging
markets
may eventually lead to a social and political backlash against liberalization and globalization.
That is why economic growth in emerging
markets
must be cohesive and reduce inequality.
Indeed, Kozul-Wright opposes any tightening at all: If the Fed “follows through on raising interest rates,” this could cause serious trouble for the global economy, and especially emerging markets, because of “the enormous tsunami of debt bearing down on households, businesses, banks, and governments.”
And Nobel laureate Robert Shiller agrees, warning that excessively low interest rates have created “overheated asset
markets
– real estate, equities, and long-term bonds – [which] could lead to a major correction and another economic crisis.”
Even in the short term, admission to the SDR could help by convincing
markets
that China’s currency adjustment in August was not the start of a big devaluation.
Nouriel Roubini, who famously forecast the 2008 financial crisis, agrees that “a correction has already occurred in emerging markets, limiting the need for further adjustment when the Fed moves.”
To avert financial crises, credit creation by banks needs to be controlled directly or even eliminated altogether, in favor of direct lending to businesses by savers through capital
markets.
They might resort to the inflation tax and inject the national currency to restore liquidity to their banking systems and financial
markets.
There were some – Frédéric Bastiat and Jean-Baptiste Say come to mind – who believed that government should put the unemployed to work building infrastructure when
markets
or production were temporarily disrupted.
These, too, had external effects; but, at least in the short run, the medicine (distortions in capital markets) was generally considered less damaging than the disease (economic collapse in the advanced economies).
Asset prices shifted, and capital rushed out of emerging markets, causing credit conditions to tighten and exchange rates to fall.
Second, Europe needs more flexible labor
markets.
Emergencies should not be dealt with on an ad hoc basis by 27 finance ministers frantic to reach a solution before the Asian
markets
open.
As of last week, jobless claims remained rather low, as they have for some time, which bodes well for US stock
markets.
The 1990s was the era of neoliberalism, an economic worldview that wrongly assumed that the benefits of economic growth would trickle down to those at the bottom; government should embrace austerity and do little more than let
markets
work.
Governments suddenly found themselves with much lower revenues than they expected; when
markets
proved unwilling to lend them the difference, they ended up printing money, causing exchange rates to weaken and inflation to rise.
But just when they were supposed to be reaping the benefits of their hard work, the East Asian crisis of July 1997 caused commodity prices to collapse, which forced Russia into default in August 1998 and shut down all emerging
markets
through financial contagion.
Domestic policymakers, it is said, are largely powerless in the face of global
markets.
Prevent domestic policymakers from intervening with their regulations and barriers, they say, and global
markets
will take care of themselves, in the process creating a more integrated and efficient world economy.
Indeed, the erosion of the nation-state ultimately does little good for global
markets
as long as we lack viable mechanisms of global governance.
Moreover, eliminating the individual mandate could disrupt health-insurance markets, because there will be fewer younger, healthier people purchasing insurance.
Falling incomes and rising deficits could translate into less stable health-insurance
markets
and cuts to Medicaid, which reimburses prescriptions for naloxone, a drug used to reverse opioid overdoses.
Europe’s agricultural protectionism also harms developing countries, which are unable to sell their agricultural products – in many cases, the only goods they can export – in European
markets.
Unguided capitalism undermined itself, according to Erhard, as monopolists cornered
markets
and captured the state.
This requires investigation of
markets
and trends, and identification of specific firms that would be desirable for the clusters or niches that the country wants to promote.
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