Recession
in sentence
2506 examples of Recession in a sentence
Instead of falling back into
recession
or secular stagnation, the US economy continued growing and creating jobs as the stimulus was reduced and then stopped.
In other words, by advocating even deeper cuts in emissions, Hedegaard is, in effect, calling for an even deeper
recession.
Whatever the reason for the anemic recovery – a Japanese-like post-crisis balance-sheet
recession
or a 1930s style liquidity trap – the QE payback was disappointing.
Doing so raises the distinct possibility that the Fed will lack the ammunition it will need to counter the inevitable next
recession.
President Barack Obama has deployed the “confidence multiplier” and claims to have contained the
recession.
But if there is a “double dip” recession, Americans will become susceptible to all kinds of fear mongering and populist demagogy.
In the United States, 95 of the 100 largest metropolitan areas added jobs and increased their economic output in the five years following the Great Recession, but only 20 experienced median-wage growth.
There is, however, scant evidence that the real problem holding back investment is excessively high wages (many corporations reduced overtime and benefit contributions, and even cut wages during the recession).
After all, the housing bubble was caused, in part, by pushing credit on households so that they would spend the US out of the
recession
that followed the dot-com bust.
Yes, the economy recovered spectacularly from a deep
recession
in 1981-1982.
So the commentary on Gordon’s paper has been largely dissociated from the policy discussions addressing the ongoing Great
Recession.
With the euro taking the blame in recent years for Europe’s many economic travails (from a double-dip
recession
to a slow and uneven recovery), nationalist, Euroskeptic, and populist political movements have gained ground.
In Search of Global DemandOnce again, Germany and Japan have slipped into
recession.
From the standpoint of global political stability,
recession
and stagnation in Germany and Japan is potentially even worse news.
These jobs will have to fulfill demand coming from outside the US, because as a falling dollar and possibly a domestic
recession
shrinks the gap between American demand and American production, there must be a countervailing boost to demand relative to production outside the US.
Every piece of good news suggesting that America's
recession
is about to end is followed by bad news suggesting otherwise.
Much of the discussion of the US economy is of little help, for it is focused on the wrong question: when did the
recession
start and end?
The
recession
of 2001 combined an inventory downturn with an investment downturn.
Five years from its outbreak, the fallout from the financial crisis and
recession
triggered by the collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers continues.
NEW YORK – The latest macroeconomic news from the United States, other advanced economies, and emerging markets confirms that the global economy will face a severe
recession
in 2009.
In the US,
recession
started in December 2007, and will last at least until December 2009 – the longest and deepest US
recession
since World War II, with the cumulative fall in GDP possibly exceeding 5%.
The
recession
in other advanced economies (the euro zone, United Kingdom, European Union, Canada, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand) started in the second quarter of 2008, before the financial turmoil in September and October further aggravated the global credit crunch.
There is now also the beginning of a hard landing in emerging markets as the
recession
in advanced economies, falling commodity prices, and capital flight take their toll on growth.
Indeed, the world should expect a near
recession
in Russia and Brazil in 2009, owing to low commodity prices, and a sharp slowdown in China and India that will be the equivalent of a hard landing (growth well below potential) for these countries.
With a global
recession
a near certainty, deflation – rather than inflation – will become the main concern for policymakers.
Trapped in a cycle of political uncertainty, economic recession, and escalating violence, humanitarian disaster has become a way of life.
If the
recession
cuts deep in the developed nations, many workers will lose their jobs.
If the
recession
reduces demand for imports from developing nations, many people living in those countries will lose their jobs.
This will be where the
recession
hits hardest.
Some will see globalization as the cause of this hardship, for if the poor were not linked to the rich through trade, they would not be affected by the
recession.
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