Rapidly
in sentence
2248 examples of Rapidly in a sentence
Moreover, real estate prices will most likely stop rising
rapidly
– indeed, they may even decline.
The reason we seem incapable of coming together to protect the climate is known as the “tragedy of the commons”: a shared resource tends to be
rapidly
depleted because no single actor – whether a country or a person – considers how their actions affect other users.
Using our current technologies, no; but if we develop and
rapidly
adopt new technologies that are within our scientific reach, yes.
Business will now continue as usual, both in terms of climate-change diplomacy, with its wandering circus of big international meetings, and in terms of
rapidly
increasing emissions.
But rising CO2 emissions constitute what is really happening on the ground: a
rapidly
growing industrial base in emerging markets is being hard-wired to intensive use of coal.
The West’s 70-year-old commitment to common security, open markets, and democratization is unraveling, and the world is moving
rapidly
from a unipolar world order to a multipolar one.
Large, politically well-connected groups of companies – known as chaebol – expanded
rapidly
by taking on large amounts of cheap debt.
The result was that agricultural labor and resources were
rapidly
diverted to industry, resulting in a famine that killed tens of millions.
When oil prices declined
rapidly
in 2015, for example, Africa’s energy importers spent less on oil, while exporting countries suffered financially.
To be sure, Chinese military expenditures, up more than 12% this year, have been growing even more
rapidly
than its economy.
The direct ecological footprint of the livestock population is larger than that of the human population, with
rapidly
rising global meat consumption becoming a key driver of water stress by itself.
It is no surprise, then, that China’s current-account surplus has shrunk rapidly, from its 2007 peak of more than 10% of GDP to about 2% of GDP today.
Finally, China’s capacity for innovation is improving steadily, owing to
rapidly
increasing human capital and rising investment in research and development.
The increasing demand for oil from all countries, but particularly from
rapidly
growing emerging-market countries like China and India, has therefore been, and will continue to be, an important force pushing up the global price.
The European Monetary Union acted as a powerful catalyst for European integration,
rapidly
bringing together 17 diverse economies in a single monetary union – but without fiscal solidarity, a way to enforce fiscal discipline, or an established lender of last resort.
Economists at Citigroup, for example, boldly concluded that circumstances had never been this conducive to broad, sustained growth around the world, and projected
rapidly
rising global output until 2050, led by developing countries in Asia and Africa.
Policymakers in the industrial core looked the other way as
rapidly
growing East Asian countries acquired Western technologies and industrial capabilities through unorthodox policies such as subsidies, local content requirements, reverse engineering, and currency undervaluation.
Manufacturing industries will remain poor countries’ “escalator industries,” but the escalator will neither move as rapidly, nor go as high.
Central and local government borrowing in China has soared: bank and shadow-bank credit has grown rapidly: and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has increasingly issued direct loans to state-owned banks in a maneuver closely resembling monetary finance of government spending.
The enrollment rate in Sub-Saharan Africa rose from 58% in 1999 to 76% in 2010, even as the region’s primary-school-age populations grew
rapidly.
The International Monetary Fund and the OECD have been
rapidly
downgrading their forecasts for global economic growth, and the Economist Intelligence Unit estimates that nearly half of the world’s economies are at a “high” or “very high” risk of political and social unrest.
China’s economic footprint, moreover, is spreading
rapidly
across Asia and the rest of the world.
The first change concerns China’s pattern of economic growth, which so far has been achieved mostly by
rapidly
increasing factor inputs – labor, capital, and energy.
The question is how
rapidly
will China’s authorities allow the renminbi to appreciate.
While China’s economy is growing very rapidly, Japan is still struggling.
The Real Challenges to GrowthMILAN – Advanced economies’ experience since the 2008 financial crisis has spurred a
rapidly
evolving discussion of growth, employment, and income inequality.
Exports are growing
rapidly
(outpacing import growth), owing to lower energy costs, new technologies that favor re-localization, and a declining real effective exchange rate (nominal dollar deprecation combined with muted domestic wage and income growth and higher inflation in major developing-country trading partners).
While China may never become a truly global hegemon (because its rise is coinciding with that of India), the US nonetheless feels threatened by China’s
rapidly
growing geostrategic presence.And this brings us to the third US concern: national security.
While China may never become a truly global hegemon (because its rise is coinciding with that of India), the US nonetheless feels threatened by China’s
rapidly
growing geostrategic presence.
Under Rato, the IMF at least took some modest steps towards giving China and other
rapidly
emerging markets more say in running the place.
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