Recovery
in sentence
2780 examples of Recovery in a sentence
I fell in-love with this movie from beginning to end,the first time i watched it i closed my eyes in the beginning when i saw the horse "Sonador" fall,i cried through this whole movie and at the same time,had a wonderful smile on my face..Dakota fanning is just wonderful, all of my favorite actors in this movie, i wish it could have been longer and shown more of "Sonador's
" recovery
etc,,but the last 10minutes,the last part of the race i could feel the uplifting experience of "Sonador"across the finishing line,a baby could watch this it is just that compatible for families.this
In the end, she gets raped and dies, and the husband makes a full
recovery.
Oh, I forgot to mention the discussion of the concept of Peak Oil: that once aggregate world oil output reaches its maximum peak, subsequent
recovery
will plateau and then begin a permanent decline.
Most recessions in the United States have been relatively short and shallow, with durations of less than a year between the beginning of the downturn and the date when the
recovery
begins.
In may places, the environment has been devastated almost beyond
recovery.
Now endorsing British austerity, Lagarde said that it had increased confidence in the UK’s economic prospects, thereby spurring the recent
recovery.
For these reasons, the UK should have had a quick recovery; instead, the Cameron government’s gratuitous austerity stifled it.
But, while we are not at that point today, the Great Depression is no less relevant for us, because it is increasingly likely that long-term unemployment will become a similar impediment to
recovery
within the next two years.
But they also recovered much more strongly, suggesting that ever-growing bailouts may not be the best prescription for
recovery.
Structural reforms, including the immediate closing of financial institutions and the elimination of non-performing loans, also helped to bolster
recovery.
Greece, by contrast, has utterly failed to engineer a
recovery.
Many have questioned whether agonizing reforms are entirely necessary; if the country returned to the drachma, they suggest, it could implement interest-rate cuts and devalue its exchange rate, thereby engineering an export-led
recovery.
But, given Greece’s small export sector, not to mention the weakness of the global economy, such a
recovery
may be impossible.
Education is the key to
recovery
for households and countries hit by conflict.
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.
As central banks’ key role in the
recovery
from the post-2008 global economic crisis demonstrated, monetary policy must be flexible and innovative.
In fact, the situation today is just as dangerous as it was in 2007, with the United States now worried by its anemic economic recovery, Europe paralyzed by fears for the survival of its currency union, and emerging markets wrestling with asset-price bubbles.
Dissatisfaction is made worse by the government's mistakes: on the strength of widely expected economic recovery, it predicted in June 1995 the creation of 700,000 jobs over the next two years.
No doubt he remembers a past fiasco of his own making when, in 1974 as prime minister under Giscard d’Estaing, he attempted to incite economic
recovery
through inflation.
For most Americans, there is no recovery, with 95% of the gains going to the top 1%.
So, with Europe’s Great Malaise continuing in 2014 and the US
recovery
excluding all but those at the top, count me dismal.
The US economy is slightly more robust, although even there
recovery
from the 2008 financial crisis remains disappointingly slow, employment rates are well below 2007 levels, and annual inflation will not reach the Federal Reserve’s 2% target for several years.
From the trough of recessions,
recovery
to pre-recession output levels took less than two quarters on average, and employment recovered within eight months.
The current
recovery
appears to be similarly slow in creating jobs.
So, rather than hire in panic at the first sign of a
recovery
for fear that they will be unable to do so later and lose sales, firms would rather make sure that the
recovery
is well established before adding workers.
Economic
recovery
is all about jobs, not output, and politicians are willing to push for economic stimulus, both fiscal (tax cuts or government spending) and monetary (lower short-term interest rates), until jobs start reappearing.
For example, the 2009 stimulus package enacted by the Obama administration had many billions of dollars devoted to cancer research, though such research employs few people directly and is spent over a long time horizon – far beyond that of even a prolonged
recovery.
It was largely a fluke that this growth slowdown coincided with an asset-bubble collapse and a cyclical depression – one that caused Japanese output to shrink by about 10% in a few short years, followed by only a slow
recovery
to the new, lower potential growth rate.
Those policies increased inequality, deepened the divide between northern and southern member states, and slowed economic
recovery.
Given that affluent households spend a smaller share of their incomes and wealth, greater inequality translates into lower overall consumption, thereby hindering the
recovery
of economies already burdened by inadequate aggregate demand.
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