Markets
in sentence
9395 examples of Markets in a sentence
Other major goals include upgrading health care, reforming financial markets, and aiming to reduce the high levels of income inequality.
Many emerging
markets
have been hit by lower prices for their commodity exports, but India’s exports of goods seem to be doing worse recently than those of other emerging
markets.
They also share an interest in keeping oil flowing to world
markets
– and in capturing the bulk of the revenues.
Her Republican counterpart, Donald Trump, is downright hostile to trade deals that would throw open US
markets.
Why can’t today’s emerging
markets
replicate levels of productivity that were achieved in countries with worse social indicators and much older technologies?
That is why today’s emerging
markets
are so much less productive than rich countries were in 1960, even though the latter were less urban, had higher birth rates and less formal schooling, and used much older technologies.
But, while Russia (and Iran) were once Turkey’s great geo-political rivals, today they are export
markets
and energy suppliers.
However, Hong Kong has some distinguishing features, including a very internationally minded and outward-looking government, owing to our close integration into world
markets
long before globalization became a catchphrase.
The key political change was the appointment of a new finance minister, Palaniappan Chidambaram, whose selection by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress party leader Sonia Gandhi sent a strong positive signal to the Indian business community and to financial
markets.
Similarly, maintaining open global
markets
is a necessary (though not sufficient) condition for alleviating poverty in poor countries even as it benefits the US.
Yet, while globalization isn’t perfect, it has pulled millions out of poverty in developing countries like China and India, created new
markets
for goods made by poor countries, and reduced prices for rich-country consumers.
They are now fully aware that their slightly nostalgic post-colonial view of these countries as large export
markets
and deep reservoirs of cheap labor has become outdated.
After all, the opponents of free trade ask, if Asia's tigers can be brought to their knees by international financial markets, is any developing country safe?
Geographical location is also important, as such things as distance from markets, bad climates and poor soil hinder economic growth in developing countries.
As the Indian business analyst Virendra Parekh has observed: “The second fastest-growing economy in the world now has the unenviable distinction of having the fastest falling financial
markets
in Asia.”
To avoid exciting the markets, it would have to be voluntary.
Farmers and food retailers can connect directly through mobile phones and distribution hubs, enabling farmers to sell their crops at higher “farm-gate” prices and without delay, while buyers can move those crops to
markets
with minimum spoilage and lower prices for final consumers.
But digital information technologies, if deployed cooperatively and globally, will be our most important new tools, because they will enable us to join together globally in markets, social networks, and cooperative efforts to solve our common problems.
Forecasters, like markets, are often influenced by “herd instinct.”
It is telling that the US Federal Reserve has now pursued modest interest-rate hikes without triggering an adverse reaction even in emerging markets, which last year were dreading such a move.
This points to another vulnerability: weaknesses within labor
markets
that have proved particularly damaging for the young.
On inequality, success will require stronger and more flexible labor
markets.
Especially in nervous markets, which we certainly have today, any perception that the ECB’s decisions might not take into account the interests of the whole eurozone, or could commit the major countries to significant losses, could itself be destabilizing.
But unlike Chavez, who leads one of the world's top oil producers, the need to stabilize an economy closely monitored by international financial
markets
forced Gutierrez to abandon campaign promises that helped secure his victory.
An alternative option would be to activate the European Central Bank’s “outright monetary transactions” program, in which the ECB would purchase eurozone member states’ bonds in secondary
markets.
If the Basel process stalls, transatlantic deals, which are the crucial underpinning of Western capital markets, will be far harder to reach.
Since that exceeds the size of the government deficit, it implies that private
markets
do not need to buy any of the newly issued government debt.
Europe, they argue, faces a mass influx that threatens to place even greater strain on its economies, labor markets, and cultures.
The US Treasury welcomed government intervention in exchange rate markets, and encouraged the IMF to support such interventions with mega-billion dollar loans to crisis countries.
The harsh truth is that neither the IMF nor the Bush administration really believes in free
markets.
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