Outlook
in sentence
541 examples of Outlook in a sentence
Although exiting the Troika program is undoubtedly a success, especially when compared with the country’s wretched
outlook
in late 2010, no one should aspire to what Ireland has been through.
Nevertheless, whichever direction the euro crisis takes, its ultimate resolution will end the extreme existential uncertainty that clouds the
outlook
today.
Russian diplomats, whose
outlook
also remains largely shaped by the Cold War, seized on the proposal.
Or perhaps its
outlook
already is quite internationalist – as its actions during the financial crisis suggest – and it is only domestic political constraints that prevent this from being acknowledged openly.
The International Monetary Fund upgraded the GDP growth
outlook
of all six of the top ten oil producers that were shown separately in its 2018 forecast update, and the projected growth of world trade volumes was raised half a percentage point this year and next.
Capaldo and his collaborators offer a starkly different outlook: a competitive race to the bottom in labor markets, with a decline in wages and government spending keeping a lid on aggregate demand and employment.
The plans are illustrative of Myanmar’s pragmatic new
outlook.
Syriza does not share this outlook; and, indeed, Tsipras did not seek out To Potami, which received 6% of the vote, as a potential coalition partner.
Until 2015, the
outlook
is gloomy for Europe and, by extension, for the emerging and developing economies.
What is the immediate and longer-term
outlook
for US monetary policy?
Ignoring the various dimensions of suicide bombing, and the
outlook
of the groups responsible, America and its allies have been left helpless to comprehend, much less address, the largely indifferent reaction of many Muslims to the US-led “war on terror.”
Immigrants from Algeria, Bangladesh, Pakistan, or Turkey will, in the course of a generation or two, become European in
outlook
and politics.
Both Japan and the United States stand out as bright spots in the subdued global outlook, but for different reasons.
Wading into the review’s details, one finds a slightly improved
outlook
for medium-term growth.
The revision of data for household spending patterns lends support to the economic
outlook.
In his 1946 Long Telegram, which marked the start of the Cold War, the United States diplomat George F. Kennan understood that the Communist Party line did “not represent the natural
outlook
of Russian people.”
The
outlook
for global growth is improving, and, with sensible policies, the next several years could be quite a bit better than the last – certainly for advanced economies, and perhaps for most others as well.
Today’s German elites share an
outlook
that is a far cry from the inward-looking provincialism of the post-war Bonn Republic.
Only when India chose a course of market reforms in the mid-1980s did the
outlook
improve.
If this occurs, the
outlook
for faster, more inclusive growth would be weakened further.
Furthermore, the demographic
outlook
is frightening: the working-age population, currently at the same level as in the late 1980s, is set to decline by 0.5-1% annually in the years to come.
If ongoing urbanization can be coupled with job creation – a distinct possibility in light of China’s emphasis on developing its embryonic labor-intensive services sector – the
outlook
for household-income growth is quite encouraging.
But there was always more to Schmidt’s
outlook
on the world: As a son of Germany’s largest port city, he was a committed internationalist, genuinely interested in what lay beyond our borders.
Over the long term, however, the
outlook
for investing in emerging-market economies, particularly those with strong macroeconomic fundamentals, stable political environments, and an expanding middle class, is promising.
Indeed, it is a question that also speaks to the increasingly worrisome
outlook
for the global economy.
This would shield their populations from the West’s problems and, at the global level, provide a counter-impetus to the deteriorating global
outlook.
But such steps, while notable, would prove insufficient to counter fully the slowdown emanating from the West; and it certainly would not materially change the
outlook
for the United States and Europe.
But the
outlook
for 2007 is for weakening global economic growth.
Fortunately, the
outlook
appears promising, with increased private-sector confidence, rising capacity utilization, and an encouraging sales
outlook
for companies.
Moreover, major changes in important developing economies such as Argentina, Saudi Arabia, and Brazil have made the future
outlook
even murkier.
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