Recovery
in sentence
2780 examples of Recovery in a sentence
The reason why
recovery
from the crash of 2007-2008 has been so anemic is straightforward.
The Fed was right to adopt new expansionary monetary measures in the face of a weak US
recovery.
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde has called for coordinated action to sustain the global
recovery.
As the euro remains strong relative to the dollar in 2004, America's trade deficit will moderate, but at the cost of making a robust European
recovery
all the more difficult.
Meanwhile, once
recovery
has set in, the huge borrowing demands of the US and Europe will almost certainly drive up real interest rates globally, posing new problems for the world's emerging markets.
There is much more truth to the argument offered by the Democrats, even if Obama and his team also deserve a fair share of the blame for pursuing inappropriate fiscal austerity in the early stages of the
recovery.
Troubled economies need structural reforms, but macroeconomic
recovery
programs are the immediate priority.
Viewing the situation from the ground – which is essential if security is to be restored and economic
recovery
is to be achieved – local militias must be able to defend themselves against rivals or criminal gangs.
The Fed’s easy money policy is now stoking US inflation rather than a
recovery.
Putting Europe’s Long-Term Unemployed Back to WorkVIENNA – Although the European Union is in the midst of an economic recovery, long-term unemployment – joblessness and job-seeking that lasts at least a year – remains stubbornly high in many of the countries that were hardest hit by the 2008 financial crisis and its aftermath.
Further efforts to support economic
recovery
will likely require fiscal interventions, such as so-called helicopter money – the injection of funds into the economy by the central bank.
To start cutting now risks derailing the
recovery
– which is already bringing down borrowing more rapidly than expected.
Alan Greenspan's Federal Reserve deserves credit for managing the 1992-96
recovery
from the "Bush recession."
Japan’s bold monetary easing, for example, was a critical element of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s strategy for lifting the Japanese economy out of more than a decade of recession – and it has led to a remarkable
recovery.
On the contrary, they can bolster
recovery
in participating economies.
As Barry Eichengreen and Jeffrey Sachs demonstrated in 1984, while abandoning the gold standard had an immediate negative impact, it quickly spurred recovery, with the first countries to devalue their currencies escaping depression earlier than others.
Indeed, the pace of private-sector job growth has actually been much stronger during this
recovery
than during the
recovery
from the 2001 recession, and is comparable to the
recovery
from the 1990-1991 recession.
This pattern also characterizes the current recovery, and recent data suggest that mismatches between the demand and supply of labor by industry are back to pre-recession levels.
Member countries were effectively divided into “good” and “bad,” with the latter forced to implement austerity programs that have made their economic
recovery
– and thus their convergence with the “good” countries – all but impossible.
So how can it be credited for economic
recovery
in the mid 80’s and 90’s?
For those reading the tea leaves of global recovery, the third-quarter GDP numbers offered no solace.
Once the brief stimulus-fueled
recovery
faded, growth in world trade again slowed quickly, falling to 2% year on year over the past 18 months.
And China’s banks pumped massive amounts of credit into the country’s economy, enabling it to sustain import demand, which was critical to the global
recovery.
In his book Golden Fetters, the economist Barry Eichengreen argued that the lack of coordinated action dragged out the global
recovery
process.
Another global fiscal stimulus – focused on public investment in infrastructure and education – would deliver the adrenaline shot needed for a robust
recovery.
Otherwise, a sustainable global
recovery
may remain elusive, in which case 2014 could end in low gear as well.
The second would mean giving up on monetary union in order to be able to deploy national monetary and fiscal policies in the service of longer-term
recovery.
But much more work must be done to ensure a stable long-term
recovery.
And yet, despite these positive indicators, Spain’s long-term economic
recovery
remains far from certain.
The most potent threat to Spain’s economic
recovery
stems from the labor market.
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