Negative
in sentence
2738 examples of Negative in a sentence
But he cannot hope to “Make America Great Again” if he has to worry about capital flight, and he will not be able to enact his domestic agenda if he has to accommodate
negative
market sentiments abroad.
“Anglo-Saxon” is more often used in a
negative
sense by the French, as in “Anglo-Saxon bankers” or “Anglo-Saxon conspiracies” (to keep the French down).
Although this transition would have a
negative
impact on China’s economic growth, it would not be nearly as dire as many seem to believe.
It is not being
negative
or obstructionist in blocking the liberalization process on several fronts, which is India's historic manner of conducting global trade negotiations.
It is the one policy that will always stimulate nominal demand, even when other policies – such as debt-financed fiscal deficits or
negative
interest rates – are ineffective.
If our only way out is interest rates
negative
enough to re-stimulate that rapid growth, we are doomed to repeat past mistakes.
And if Takahashi had stimulated the economy with
negative
interest rates, and then sought to reverse that policy, he would have met the same end.
In the eurozone, GDP growth is slowing, and inflation has turned
negative.
Because wages are still rising, the inflation target for 2015 has been set at 3% – higher than the actual 2014 inflation of 2%, even though producer-price inflation has been
negative
for 36 months.
Furthermore, as I pointed out at a recent Intelligence Squared US debate in New York, the law may actually have a
negative
effect on research and development, which is a key driver of long-term growth in the US.
But, there are reasons to believe that higher interest rates, even though expected, can have a
negative
impact on home prices.
In only three countries - New Zealand, Thailand and Sweden - are generational balances negative, meaning that those countries are leaving generations yet born with lower lifetime net taxes than current newborns.
Since then, some subsequent revisions have been positive and some
negative.
The National Front, the only party to present a coherent, united, and purely
negative
position on Europe, is predicted by many public opinion polls to win next month’s European Parliament election.
Does this blogger ever say anything negative, or is she always talking about the great products she uses?
The economic effects have been
negative
overall for oil-exporting countries, and positive for oil-importing countries.
Given the growth patterns across advanced and developing countries prior to the crisis, and then the large
negative
shock, it is likely that there is a shortfall of tradable global aggregate demand, impeding an important component of global growth.
Today’s anti-corruption campaign should be viewed as an effort by China’s leaders to correct another
negative
consequence of past policies.
A recent Financial Times/Harris poll in the US, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Italy, and Spain found people nearly three times more likely to say that globalization is
negative
than positive.
Increased
negative
sentiment could have the worst possible result: not just Doha’s failure, but also the raising of trade and immigration barriers.
As the recent crises in advanced countries demonstrated, this is not a safe assumption: Unsustainable public debt and fiscal deficits forced central banks to expand their balance sheets massively, causing benchmark rates to turn
negative
in real (inflation-adjusted) terms.
Afghans look to their government and the international forces to protect them, so, when awful mistakes occur, the
negative
impact is doubled.
The ECB has been following a similar strategy of large-scale asset purchases and extremely low (indeed negative) short-term interest rates.
Putting aside Trump’s additional announcements of trade actions targeting China, tariffs on steel and aluminum would undoubtedly have
negative
effects on the US economy.
The annual inflation rate, at just 0.5%, is now so close to zero that even a minor shock could push it into
negative
territory and trigger a downward price spiral.
A generation of global market participants knows only a world of low (or even negative) interest rates and artificially inflated asset prices.
With a lack of traditional rate-cutting firepower, the next downturn could be longer than usual, compelling further reliance on unconventional monetary policy – even beyond the
negative
nominal interest rates now being pursued in Europe and Japan.
The eurozone technically emerged from recession, the unemployment rate in the United States was lower than in previous years, and Japan began to stir after a long slumber and the
negative
shock of the earthquake and tsunami in 2011.
Fourth, gold prices rose sharply when real (inflation-adjusted) interest rates became increasingly
negative
after successive rounds of quantitative easing.
The time to buy gold is when the real returns on cash and bonds are
negative
and falling.
Back
Next
Related words
Rates
Interest
Positive
Growth
Effects
Would
About
Which
Their
Impact
There
Could
Movie
Other
Policy
People
Economic
Reviews
Countries
Consequences