Recession
in sentence
2506 examples of Recession in a sentence
The context this time was a desire to achieve expectations of greater monetary stimulus, in order to facilitate recovery from the great
recession
of 2008-2009.
In principle, deficit countries may not have to go through further
recession
to promote external adjustment if they can generate sufficient income from exports to service their external debts.
Spain’s unemployment, which had been near 20% since the beginning of the recession, crept even higher.
And the long crisis that began with the collapse of the housing bubble in 2007 and the subsequent
recession
will continue.
Even before the recession, American-style capitalism was not working for a large share of the population.
The
recession
only made its rough edges more apparent.
Jobless Recoveries and Manic PoliciesCHICAGO – Monetary and fiscal policies in the United States, both in this
recession
and the
recession
of 2001, have been among the most accommodating in the industrial world.
President George H.W. Bush is widely believed to have lost his re-election bid, despite winning a popular war in Iraq, because he seemed out of touch with public hardship following the 1991
recession.
On at least two occasions in 1998, bad news could have set off a crash in American stock prices and an economic
recession.
Everyone knew that the financial crisis and ensuing
recession
had started in the US, and that the country was to blame for a near-collapse of the global economy.
Many were buried in the Great
Recession
that followed; many more are still digging out.
One day, the country is on the brink of a double-dip recession; the next, it is on the verge of a turbo-charged recovery, powered by resilient consumers and US multinationals starting to deploy, at long last, their massive cash reserves.
In the process, the risk of
recession
remains uncomfortably high, the unemployment crisis deepens, and inequities rise as already-stretched social safety nets prove even more porous.
And, as we recover from the current recession, most experts expect this group to grow even larger.
Moreover, a higher inflation target – and the restoration of credibility that it would imply – would enable central banks to return to a lower inflation target without creating a
recession
once debt levels had been reduced and aggregate demand had recovered.
There was in fact no immediate
recession
in the United Kingdom following the Brexit vote; indeed, there was not even a slowdown in growth.
As a result, while political uncertainty will take its toll on economic growth, the Arab Awakening countries should not have to face a transitional recession, as post-communist Europe did in the 1990’s.
A busted bubble led to a massive Keynesian stimulus that averted a much deeper recession, but that also fueled substantial budget deficits.
With some luck, this time will be different - the inflation problem is not yet acute and hence early and gradual restraint may produce slowdown rather than a
recession.
There is no excuse for the Fed to incite outright
recession.
If financial regulations are loosened too much, the result could be another asset and credit bubble, and even another financial crisis and
recession.
Hamada cites the example of Japanese Finance Minister Korekiyo Takahashi, who used monetary-financed fiscal expansion to pull Japan’s economy out of
recession
in the early 1930s.
As a result, Trump has not caused a massive, self-inflicted recession, and we should perhaps congratulate his team more often for avoiding that scenario.
Short-term rates have gone so low since the worldwide
recession
of 2001 - 1% and 2%, respectively, in the United States and the Eurozone, and practically zero in Japan - that a strengthening world economy will force central banks to tighten the monetary reins.
Finally, China’s balance-sheet
recession
has barely begun.
Furthermore, the only reason why unemployment remains high in the eurozone is that the labor-force participation rate has continued to increase throughout the recession; and, indeed, employment is returning to pre-crisis levels.
The popular “discouraged worker” hypothesis holds that a slide into deflation is costly, because a long
recession
induces workers to leave the labor force altogether.
Though prices collapsed during the Great
Recession
of 2009, they quickly recovered, with the value of Russian output reaching another peak in 2012-2013 – precisely when Russia’s position on the EU-Ukraine association agreement hardened.
Despite the economic recession, the authorities have also pledged to allocate around $1 billion of humanitarian support for the northeast.
In 2014, when Poland was governed by Civic Platform (PO), it was the only country in Europe that had successfully staved off
recession
in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.
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