Recovery
in sentence
2780 examples of Recovery in a sentence
Those who said that there would be no downturn, or that
recovery
would be rapid, or that the economy’s real problems were structural, or that supporting the economy would produce inflation (or high short-term interest rates), or that immediate fiscal austerity would be expansionary were wrong.
Eventually, Congress took action and enacted PROMESA, a law ostensibly designed to facilitate debt restructuring and economic
recovery.
This would create the space the authorities need to implement macroeconomic policies conducive to
recovery.
The PROMESA Board was supposed to chart a path to recovery; its plan makes a
recovery
a virtual impossibility.
Brazil’s Economic RevolutionBRASILIA – Large emerging economies were hit hard in the past year – particularly in the first half – by the crisis in developed countries, with Europe in recession and the United States staging only a meager
recovery.
To accelerate economic growth, the priority has been to stimulate investment and
recovery
in manufacturing, the sector that was hardest hit by the international crisis.
What we hope for most is that rich countries – and not only the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) – also contribute to global
recovery.
Meanwhile the market is mispricing perennial structural challenges, in particular mounting and unsustainable global debt and a dim fiscal outlook, particularly in the US, where the price of this
recovery
is a growing deficit.
As 2018 progresses, business leaders and market participants should – and undoubtedly will – bear in mind that we are moving ever closer to the date when payment for today’s
recovery
will fall due.
Only swift and sustained
recovery
can stem the rise in the human cost of economic stagnation.
We need resolute action to address the uncertainty confronting the global economy and to chart a path toward self-sustaining
recovery
and job creation.
Strong action by African governments and robust support from the international community can keep Africa's
recovery
on track.
Fed Vice-Chairman Stanley Fischer, like former Chairman Ben Bernanke, has stressed that premature fiscal consolidation can hold back post-crisis
recovery.
Moreover, during the upcoming G-8 summit, Hollande will enjoy the support of the United States, which worries that deflation in Europe would slow its own economic
recovery.
Indeed, it is blatantly obvious that in a country like France, reduction in public spending – especially the state’s often-unproductive operating expenditures – is a prerequisite for
recovery.
The US, where consumption accounts for the bulk of the shortfall in the post-crisis recovery, is a case in point.
With the current
recovery
in real GDP on a trajectory of 2.3% annual growth – two percentage points below the norm of past cycles – it is tough to justify the widespread praise of QE.
There is a path to sustained recovery, but it is narrowing.
These countries face a weak and bumpy recovery, with unacceptably high unemployment.
In these circumstances, we need collective action for global
recovery
along four main policy lines: repair, reform, rebalancing, and rebuilding.
Before doing anything else, we must relieve some of the balance-sheet pressures – on sovereigns, households, and banks – that risk smothering the
recovery.
But consolidating too quickly can hurt the
recovery
and worsen job prospects.
With lower spending and higher savings in the advanced economies, key emerging markets must take up the slack and start providing the demand needed to power the global
recovery.
Second, an extension would prolong the sense of uncertainty that has so far jeopardized Greece’s
recovery.
The agreement’s focus should be the business environment, allowing the forces of creative destruction to lay down the foundation for a sustainable
recovery.
This implies that there cannot be any hope for a sustained
recovery
unless exports start growing.
A slow-growth China would undermine the global economic
recovery.
The supplementary fiscal spending will span a total of 15 months, focusing on speedy completion of public works required for
recovery
after the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011.
With Europe’s economy showing no sign of
recovery
and growing concern about a Chinese slowdown, Japan cannot afford to continue to tread water.
Under the new deal, Puerto Rico’s annual debt payments would increase from $420 million in fiscal year 2019 to almost $1 billion in fiscal year 2041, implying an aggregate
recovery
rate of 75.5% of the amount owed.
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