Rapid
in sentence
2563 examples of Rapid in a sentence
This would allow a
rapid
public-health response that is commensurate to the immediate challenge.
The forces of globalization that were liberated by the fall of Communism have created a better world, with
rapid
economic convergence and shrinking inequality.
The third trend reshaping labor markets is
rapid
technological change.
A fourth global trend evident in today’s labor market is the
rapid
embrace among technologically sophisticated employers of data-based approaches to human resources.
“Techno-optimists,” for their part, believe that ICT advances do have the potential to drive
rapid
productivity growth; their benefits are merely subject to lags and come in waves.
After experiencing three decades of unprecedentedly
rapid
GDP growth, the country weathered the global economic crisis exceptionally well.
And, while recovery in the advanced economies boosted exports, persistent overcapacity, combined with slower household-consumption growth than in 2012, caused investment growth, though still rapid, to decline to its lowest rate in the past 11 years.
The term reflects a growing awareness that
rapid
developments in these fields offer the potential for great benefits, but that the knowledge, tools, and techniques that enable scientific advances also can be misused to cause deliberate harm.
What at first sight seemed a meltdown, gradually came to seem just a very bad situation and soon a surprisingly
rapid
turnaround.
Buy the time it came to Brazil, at the end of 1998 and, again, early this year, everyone knew the script: new elections, a barely averted currency collapse, embarking on the IMF program, and a
rapid
rebound.
Without
rapid
growth, there is no way to reverse persistently high and increasingly structural (and therefore protracted) unemployment; safely de-leverage over-indebted balance sheets; and prevent already-disturbing income and wealth inequalities from growing worse.
Only a
rapid
change of course by the Obama administration in 2013 can begin to counteract the enmity toward the US that has been generated by more than a decade of its forces’ lethal presence in the region.
Asia’s rise over the last few decades is more than a story of
rapid
economic growth.
If
rapid
adoption of new technologies continues, that demand could peak in 2025.
And now, after four decades of
rapid
development, the country is increasingly presenting itself as a teacher.
Beating Malaria in the Greater Mekong SubregionNEW DELHI/MANILA – In Southeast Asia’s Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS), the battle against malaria is advancing at a
rapid
pace.
They do not care that the international order they want to tear down enabled the
rapid
post-1945 economic growth that liberated billions of developing-country citizens from poverty.
Those who predict generally low interest rates over the next generation point to
rapid
growth of productivity and potential output in the world economy.
They point to
rapid
technological progress, which has boosted output from new and old capital investments.
They also cite investment opportunities in emerging markets, and make the obvious point that if China and India stay on track, their economies' relative weight in the world will double in the next decade or so, as
rapid
real growth is accompanied by appreciation in their real exchange rates.
Despite their ideological differences, governments throughout the region have delivered
rapid
economic growth and improved their populations’ livelihoods.
If our only way out is interest rates negative enough to re-stimulate that
rapid
growth, we are doomed to repeat past mistakes.
Instead, the
rapid
growth of the emerging economies, especially coal-burning China, has caused global CO2 emissions to soar.
At the time, many policymakers blamed
rapid
price increases on “cost push” factors, such as pressure from trade unions for excessive wage hikes.
Because no economy had ever experienced such
rapid
growth on such a large scale, the only way to manage China’s development was, as Deng put it, to “cross the river by feeling the stones.”
Demographic trends are threatening to turn the labor surplus that helped drive China’s
rapid
growth over the last few decades into a labor shortage at an unprecedented pace.
Of course, this shift is partly a result of the secular factors that have driven China’s
rapid
growth and global expansion.
Moreover, Russia’s
rapid
demographic decline and enormous modernization deficit imply the need for a joint future with Europe.
The benefits of a monetary union based on a stable macroeconomic framework and governed by an independent central bank are manifest: the euro area has enjoyed low inflation and low interest rates for much of the last decade, a boost in trade and investment, and
rapid
integration of financial markets.
Such rapid, coordinated steps by 16 national central banks would have been unthinkable.
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