Mismatches
in sentence
56 examples of Mismatches in a sentence
Now, as a pediatric endocrinologist, I used to be very, very involved and still somewhat am, in cases in which there are
mismatches
in the externals or between the externals and the internals, and we literally have to figure out what is the description of your sex.
And the only way to correct these
mismatches
is not through more wars and more borders, but through more connectivity of pipelines and water canals.
And not just because the gender I was assigned at birth
mismatches
the one I really am.
Screwball comedy about romantic
mismatches
in New York City.
Any strategy to address the problems underpinning low productivity growth – from inadequate technological diffusion to income inequality – must address skill constraints and
mismatches
affecting the labor market’s ability to adjust.
Rather, capital-structure and maturity
mismatches
– a result of the rapid and uneven buildup of debt in the last five years – have distorted the allocation of resources, leading to non-performing, idle, and inefficient assets, thereby amplifying the financial system’s hidden flaws and increasing risk.
On the macro level, China’s growth is likely to continue to decelerate, owing to rapid population aging, high debt levels, maturity mismatches, and the escalating trade war that the US has initiated.
The economist Jeffrey Sachs, for example, has argued that the US economy needs to confront a plethora of structural impediments to sustained growth, including offshoring, skill mismatches, and decaying infrastructure.
As a result, effective measures to counteract the global talent gap – characterized by a labor shortage in certain sectors, skills
mismatches
(workers with qualifications that are no longer in high demand), and under-skilling (few or no qualifications) – are needed today.
But, in large part – and with a few exceptions in Central and Eastern Europe – emerging-market economies improved their fiscal performance by reducing overall deficits, running large primary surpluses, lowering their stock of public debt-to-GDP ratios, and reducing the currency and maturity
mismatches
in their public debt.
At the source, capital requirements for currency
mismatches
in portfolios, together with margin requirements on foreign-exchange derivatives, make sense.
But education-job
mismatches
plague economies worldwide, partly because formal education fails to produce graduates with skills and technical competencies relevant to the labor market.
Understanding the risks of excessive private-sector borrowing, the inadequacy of private lenders’ credit assessments, and the conflicts of interest that are endemic in banks, Sub-Saharan countries should impose constraints on such borrowing, especially when there are significant exchange-rate and maturity
mismatches.
The imposition of imported institutions often creates psychological and social
mismatches
that tend to lead to poor outcomes.
Nor is there anything unusual about the size of
mismatches
between job openings and worker availability by industry.
Such industrial
mismatches
become larger during recessions, reflecting greater churn in the labor market as workers move between shrinking and expanding sectors; but they decline as the economy recovers.
This pattern also characterizes the current recovery, and recent data suggest that
mismatches
between the demand and supply of labor by industry are back to pre-recession levels.
With high unemployment in many parts of the labor market, downward pressure on wages will further exacerbate the country’s already skewed income-distribution.Labor markets will eventually clear, but this will happen slowly and painfully, owing to skills gaps and other short-term
mismatches.
These include tax policy, the inefficient or improper use of public funds, impediments to structural change in product and factor markets, and
mismatches
between the reach of global financial institutions and the capacity of sovereign balance sheets to intervene in case of financial distress.
These conflicting signals and trends are a symptom of a series of fundamental
mismatches
between what employers need and the talents of those they would like to hire.
In the 1990s, however, emerging markets, especially in Asia, increased their external borrowing considerably, creating the currency and balance-sheet
mismatches
that later triggered the crisis.
For Europe, Leijonhufvud argues, this implies a three-pronged approach that focuses on “levels of leverage,” “maturity mismatches,” and “the topology of the web,” – that is, “its connectivity and the presence of critical nodes that are ‘too big to fail.’”
Their response covers concerns about measurement, structural shifts in the labor market, a potential paucity of investment opportunities, productivity-diluting technological innovations, and technology-driven skills
mismatches.
Those who have been playing with
mismatches
may be about to get burned.
Apprenticeships would facilitate the integration of younger workers into the labor force, while helping to correct skills
mismatches
among more experienced workers.
By contrast, the multilateral approach appeals to most economists, because it stresses the balance-of-payments distortions that arise from
mismatches
between saving and investment.
Many developing countries now have flexible exchange rates, and, by shifting to domestic sources of borrowing, they have reduced the currency
mismatches
associated with their liabilities.
Those tools include caps, linked to borrowers’ characteristics, on loan-to-value ratios; direct limits on currency and maturity
mismatches
in financial institutions’ balance sheets; limits on their balance sheets’ interconnectedness; and minimum reserve requirements for specific financial instruments.
As a result, even if workers gain stronger support during structural transitions (in the form of income support and retraining options), labor-market
mismatches
are likely to grow, sharpening inequality and contributing to further political and social polarization.
All have flexible exchange rates, a large war chest of reserves to shield against a run on their currencies and banks, and fewer currency
mismatches
(for example, heavy foreign-currency borrowing to finance investment in local-currency assets).
Next
Related words
Between
Skills
Maturity
Currency
Their
Labor
Demand
There
Supply
Financial
Would
Workers
Should
Market
Growth
Banks
Assets
While
Which
Structural