Rapidly
in sentence
2248 examples of Rapidly in a sentence
As the US and other advanced economies become less hospitable to developing-country exports,
rapidly
growing emerging markets, help as they may, are unlikely to take up the slack and thus provide ample fuel for export-led growth.
If exporters from Brazil, Turkey, South Africa, and Mexico – all deficit economies – were already struggling to compete with China in third markets when those markets were wide open and expanding rapidly, imagine how they will fare under less hospitable conditions.
Hundreds of thousands of industrial and commercial control systems, including the
rapidly
growing Internet of Things, are leaving ever-wider swaths of everyday life vulnerable to disruption.
The World Bank has received a modest increase in resources, but it has yet to build capacity to lend
rapidly
and globally beyond existing borrowers and loan arrangements, and its income trajectory is diminishing.
Britain’s economy grew more steadily and
rapidly
than it had done for several generations, and the tax revenue generated by growth enabled the government to pour money into education and the National Health Service.
In contrast to unexpected,
rapidly
spreading outbreaks such as the Zika epidemic, antimicrobial resistance is like a slow-motion car crash that has already begun.
However, his options are shrinking
rapidly.
How is it possible that, because no company with currently patented drugs is campaigning to help medical and nursing staff recognize the catatonic features displayed by one in ten patients going through a psychiatric unit – features that could be treated
rapidly
with benzodiazepines or ECT – these features are missed completely?
Not only will their societies be
rapidly
aging; diminishing income gaps between rich countries and emerging economies are likely to slow immigration flows, shrinking the workforce by 20% in the eurozone and 15% in the United States.
For many years, Japan was considered to have the most
rapidly
aging population on earth.
Indeed, today the world’s most
rapidly
aging country is South Korea, which became an aging society in 1999, is expected to become an aged one in 2017, and will be a super-aged one in 2027.
A
rapidly
aging population may be a problem, but, overall, it is a pretty good problem to have.
Rapidly
expanding global trade, combined with an ever-freer and faster exchange of people and ideas, has been a cornerstone of this growth, particularly of the strong productivity gains that underlie it.
Over the next decade, for example, China will replace much of its labor-intensive assembly employment with higher-value-added employment in manufacturing and services, not only in the tradable sector, but also – even more noticeably – in the
rapidly
growing non-tradable part of its economy.
Without a strategic re-orientation of its own – to remain passive is a risky endeavor in a
rapidly
changing world order – Israel would further delegitimize and isolate itself internationally.
In Mexico, the market for new low-and middle-income housing has grown rapidly, thanks to the creation of a market for residential mortgage securities in 2003.
In fact, none of the major economic and social reforms Mexico desperately needs in order to grow more rapidly, distribute wealth more evenly, and combat poverty more effectively can be passed if the institutional scaffolding is not rebuilt.
But now China does have such a strategy, or at least is
rapidly
developing one.
This is in tandem with the authorities’ efforts to promote the internationalization of the renminbi, which is
rapidly
expanding its role in trade settlement.
Urban incomes in China are now reaching a threshold where spending on both goods and services accelerates
rapidly.
In the 20 years before the 2008 financial crisis, manufacturing employment in the US
rapidly
declined in every sector except pharmaceuticals, even as added value in manufacturing rose.
Foreign firms are seeking access to China’s
rapidly
growing middle class, which the McKinsey Global Institute estimates already exceeds 200 million.
Labor-market liberalization would allow firms in the domestic sector to fire workers more rapidly, but would do little to encourage export-oriented firms to invest more and create more jobs, especially when the domestic banking system is under stress and cannot provide new credit.
The problems are the same almost everywhere (with the exception of Israel and Turkey): political suppression, economic underdevelopment and grinding poverty (except in the smaller oil states), a lack of education, high unemployment, and huge demographic pressures, owing to a very young and
rapidly
growing population.
The post-communist Party of the Democratic Left (SLD) was voted out in 1997, despite a five-year streak of economic prosperity and
rapidly
falling unemployment.
Indeed, the deflationary spiral, particularly in Greece and Spain, is causing output to contract so
rapidly
that further spending cuts and tax increases are not reducing budget deficits and public debt relative to GDP.
Of course, given that Japan’s population is
rapidly
aging, and the number of children is falling, investors find themselves asking an obvious question: “Where will Japan find the innovative and creative human resources that it needs?”
Even more worrisome are larger immutable realities – like a
rapidly
aging and shrinking population – that will limit Japan’s economic growth in the coming decades.
For many decades, Californians had
rapidly
rising living standards, great public K-12 and higher education systems, and unprecedented upward mobility.
From 2000 to 2008, these four countries’ share of global output rose rapidly, from 16% to 22% (in purchasing power parity terms), and their economies performed better than average in the subsequent global recession.
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