Recession
in sentence
2506 examples of Recession in a sentence
The third type of
recession
occurs when imbalances in an economy build up to unsustainable levels before exploding.
This form of
recession
is sometimes characterized by vast increases in debt (corporate or consumer), or by dizzying stock market or capital asset speculations that eventually come crashing down.
Is America facing this third type of
recession?
What, indeed, will be the nature of America’s next recession, that is, if America has a
recession?
Optimists predict a
recession
of the second type; pessimists suspect that a third variety
recession
is lurking in the economic shadows.
Any
recession
would likely be short and limited.
Not only may the future be less radiant, but the adjustments that will be required once reality sets in could set off a nastier
recession
and a more persistent slowing of the economy than anything predicted today.
If all of this happened, the price of oil would skyrocket owing to shortages and fears, possibly driving much of the world economy, already in a precarious position, into
recession.
Last week, similarly celebratory reports emanated from Brussels heralding the “return to growth” in Cyprus, and contrasting this piece of “good” news to Greece’s “return to recession.”
Resist our policies, by electing people like Varoufakis, and you will suffer the consequences of further recession.”
In the following year (Year 3), the
recession
deepened, with a further 2.04% drop in money income (from 98 to 96) and an even larger fall in prices as deflation hit 6.06%.
This is the picture of an economy sliding from
recession
toward something reminiscent of depression: falling incomes and even faster declines in prices.
In both the US and Europe, government leaders are gripped by one overriding fear: that their economies will slip back into
recession
– or worse.
Finding the Policy ExitNEW YORK – There is a general consensus that the massive monetary easing, fiscal stimulus, and support of the financial system undertaken by governments and central banks around the world prevented the deep
recession
of 2008-2009 from devolving into Great Depression II.
The problem is that most economies are now barely bottoming out, so reversing the fiscal and monetary stimulus too soon – before private demand has recovered more robustly – could tip these economies back into deflation and
recession.
When that happens, inflationary expectations will mount, long-term government bond yields will rise, mortgage rates and private market rates will increase, and one would end up with stagflation (inflation and recession).
Getting the exit strategy right is crucial: serious policy mistakes would significantly heighten the threat of a double-dip
recession.
The talk now is of a global
recession
that will be steep and prolonged.
As a result, the peripheral economies fell into a deep
recession.
Neither the Bank of Japan nor the European Central Bank has provided any indication that it is set to tighten monetary policy, even though economic conditions today are totally different from those that prevailed during the crisis and subsequent double-dip
recession
in the eurozone.
In Brazil, the government has been cutting an enormous fiscal deficit just as the economy is recovering from its deepest
recession
in decades (though the corruption scandal now embroiling President Michel Temer may derail that effort).
Little wonder, then, that fiscal austerity triggered a deep
recession
and a surge in unemployment.
Germany’s post-1949 Federal Republic was accustomed to being regarded as Europe’s great economic success story, but it never really recovered from the post-unification
recession
of the early 1990’s, with growth sluggish to non-existent.
The US Federal Reserve, for example, is aggressively cutting interest rates to forestall a possible
recession.
The decoupling argument also assumes that
recession
in America has no effect on Asia.
Coupled with favorable international conditions, Egypt’s annual GDP growth rate rose to 7.2% in 2008, from 4.1% in 2004, and remained at 5% in 2009-2010, despite the global
recession.
Thus, China did not suffer a severe
recession
– as occurred in Japan, Germany, and elsewhere in emerging Asia in 2009 – only because fixed investment exploded.
Deepening economic
recession
is bound to catalyze political change.
Help the Poor Help ThemselvesHELSINKI – One early result of today’s global
recession
is that many donor governments are trimming their foreign aid programs.
If the
recession
costs migrants their jobs in richer host countries and forces them to return home to their countries of origin, millions of already poor people will be thrown into greater poverty.
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