Markets
in sentence
9395 examples of Markets in a sentence
For half a century, the process of European integration proceeded – sometimes with setbacks, sometimes with giant steps forward – joining formerly separate
markets
by creating very close trade relations.
Given continental Europe's chronically high unemployment and lack-luster macroeconomic performance, Europeans would be better off with lower interest rates and a weaker currency, which is why it is foolish to regard currency markets, as politicians so often do, as akin to an Olympic competition.
The same is true of financial
markets
in general.
Moreover, housing
markets
are not the only issue.
So are stock
markets.
There is no accurate science of confidence, no way of knowing how people will react to a failure to help when
markets
collapse.
What were people in all these countries told about the
markets
in which they invested?
But were investments in their
markets
oversold?
Subsidies for R&D, together with fiscal incentives and limitations on foreign companies in African markets, could give local companies the space they need to build up their capabilities.
After the global financial crisis erupted in 2008, the G20 acted as an international crisis committee, mitigating the disaster by injecting liquidity into
markets
worldwide.
He also greatly enhanced the Fed’s standing among the general public, in financial markets, and in policy circles.
Some have actively encouraged
markets
to take the prices of many financial assets to levels no longer warranted by fundamentals.
Their prior ability to deliver on promises and expectations has made today’s financial
markets
take the forward pricing of the economy to levels that exceed what central bankers alone can reasonably deliver.
At the other extreme, early twentieth-century social Darwinists in Europe and the United States called for unfettered domestic free
markets
in which only the “fittest” would survive, leading to a stronger country.
Today’s examples of illiberal capitalism range from toleration of extreme inequality to favoring heavy redistribution, and from overweening statism to broad deregulation of
markets.
Leaving aside short-term speculative markets, demand will then decrease and supply (including the supply of substitutes) will increase.
For example, rich countries should reduce agricultural subsidies and open up their
markets
more to Third World food exports.
Following the 1997 crisis, the state withdrew further from markets, acknowledging the limits to what it can achieve and the importance of allowing private enterprise to flourish.
But governments retain a role in fostering an enabling environment within which
markets
operate.
US global leadership is therefore bound to shift away from free trade, globalization, and open
markets.
The impact on financial
markets
will be disruptive, regardless of whether the Fed aggressively tightens monetary policy to pre-empt rising prices or lets the economy “run hot” for a year or two, allowing inflation to accelerate.
Even though the dollar is already overvalued, it could move into a self-reinforcing upward spiral, as it did in the early 1980s and late 1990s, owing to dollar debts accumulated in emerging
markets
by governments and companies tempted by near-zero interest rates.
America also promised--in the Doha Declaration in 2001--to open its
markets
to the world's poorest countries.
Yet at Cancun, Mexico earlier this summer, it refused to open its
markets
even to exports from struggling African economies.
He argued that vast amounts of foreign capital flowed through US banks to the housing sector because international investors appreciated “the depth and sophistication of the country’s financial
markets
(which among other things have allowed households easy access to housing wealth).”
Flows of foreign direct investment (FDI), portfolio equity, and portfolio debt to emerging
markets
reached record highs, with portfolio debt, the most volatile and most sensitive to sudden shifts in investor sentiment, growing the fastest.
At the sector level, businesses providing consumer goods to the growing middle class in emerging
markets
have become more attractive to global investors, while capital-intensive and cyclical businesses have lost their luster.
Three of the largest emerging
markets
– India, China, and Russia – confront distinctive challenges.
Aggregate capital flows to emerging
markets
are likely to rebound later this year, but not all countries and all sectors will benefit.
Major emerging-market multinational corporations like Samsung, Tata, and Alibaba will also drive growth in their home countries and foster FDI flows among emerging
markets.
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