Recovery
in sentence
2780 examples of Recovery in a sentence
We have our interests to protect, the most important of which are economic:
recovery
of Iraqi debts owed to Russia, the contractually agreed-upon development of oil fields, restoration of public infrastructure.
If Greece is to have any realistic chance of long-term economic
recovery
and meeting its citizens’ legitimate aspirations, policymakers must recast the country’s austerity program, couple pro-growth reforms with greater social justice, and secure additional debt relief.
Interest rates would then converge to a low level, fostering
recovery
in the periphery and making it easier to stabilize public finances.
Europe is slipping back into recession just when
recovery
in the United States is finally getting some traction.
If many such discouraged workers have left the labor market, a
recovery
of the unemployment rate to pre-recession levels can be misleading.
Growth, it was thought, might slow slightly in 2011, but it would be a minor bump on the way to robust
recovery.
The consequence will almost surely be a slower
recovery
and an even longer delay before unemployment falls to acceptable levels.
The Return of Ireland’s Housing BubbleZURICH – After having endured the collapse of its housing market less than a decade ago, Ireland has lately been experiencing a blistering
recovery
in prices, which already have risen in Dublin by some 50% from the trough in 2010.
How about the third arrow, a set of policies to promote private investment so that productivity growth sustains Japan’s long-term
recovery?
From joining the negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) to introducing specially deregulated zones (my own office will oversee their implementation), my government is committed to catalyzing economic
recovery
by all means available.
This gives the region’s governments some macroeconomic breathing room, allowing them to avoid further contractionary policies and enabling their economies to participate in the global
recovery
that is now underway.
Another reason to worry is that the global
recovery
is still fragile.
The result was a disappointing, all-but-jobless
recovery.
In the US, unemployment was still 14% in 1937, four full years into the recovery, and in 1940, on the eve of the country’s entry into World War II.
That is why, for example, so many keep assuming that a normal rapid
recovery
is just around the corner.
In his recent speech in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke forcefully complained that political paralysis has possibly become the principal impediment to
recovery.
And the Fed’s 2008 decision to reduce the policy interest rate virtually to zero, together with the subsequent economic recovery, surely contributed to the strong stock-market rebound that began in early 2009.
These are big changes, and offer important confirmation that lower-income families are finally sharing in the economic
recovery.
But America’s favorable employment trend is accompanied by a substantial increase in financial-sector risks, owing to the excessively easy monetary policy that was used to achieve the current economic
recovery.
After a very slow initial recovery, real GDP began growing at annual rates of more than 4% in the second half of 2013.
That sentiment – a product of slow economic recovery, ever-widening wealth and income inequality, and a racially infused sense of insecurity (particularly among white men) – makes for volatile politics.
The slow
recovery
following the 2008 financial crisis has obscured the long-term reality that developed countries now face.
At the same time, our response must be viewed within the broader context of
recovery
and long-term development.
Faced with the difficulty of meeting their 9% capital-ratio requirement, they will achieve the target by selling assets and contracting credit – not exactly an ideal scenario for economic
recovery.
The first is that stimulus packages around the world arrested the slide into depression, and may have started a modest
recovery.
As one British official said ahead of the G-20 summit in Italy in July, “We should start to prepare exit strategies, but we should start implementing them only when [we] are sure [we] have got a
recovery
that is entrenched and self-sustaining, and I don't think anyone is saying we are at that point yet.”
Third, existing policy, even if maintained, will not produce self-sustaining
recovery.
The time to start worrying about inflation is when the
recovery
is entrenched.
With consumption accounting for 70% of US GDP in the US, and a similarly high percent in other advanced economies, this implies that the recession will last longer, and that economic
recovery
next year will be anemic (less than 1% growth in the US and even lower growth rates in Europe and Japan).
But, despite persistent deflationary pressure through 2010, rising budget deficits, high financial-sector bailout costs, continued monetization of deficits, and eventually unsustainable levels of public debt will ultimately lead to higher expected inflation – and thus to higher interest rates, which would stifle the
recovery
of private demand.
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