Resulting
in sentence
1422 examples of Resulting in a sentence
In Europe, every balance sheet available has been tapped to forestall a debt crisis in the periphery,
resulting
in large bailout packages for Greece, Ireland, and Portugal, and the contamination of the ECB’s balance sheet.
In a shrinking economy, a country’s debt-to-GDP ratio rises rather than falls, and Europe’s recession-ridden crisis countries have now saved themselves into a depression,
resulting
in mass unemployment, alarming levels of poverty, and scant hope.
The IMF is well-positioned to help its members overcome the financing gaps
resulting
from the crisis.
A third challenge in the UK is pension shortfalls
resulting
from firms going bust.
Environmental, demographic, and economic pressures aggravate water scarcity, and the
resulting
unemployment and insecurity fuels social unrest, political turmoil, and extremism.
Liberalizing lending rates might merely lead those with government guarantees to outbid smaller and more efficient enterprises,
resulting
in more misallocation of capital.
The
resulting
systemic cracks could jeopardize the entire rules-based multilateral trading system at a time when there is no good alternative.
Even before the Soviet Union’s demise,
resulting
in 15 new countries, its European “empire” had collapsed.
The
resulting
underinvestment and depreciation of the global economy’s asset base are suppressing productivity growth and thus undermining sustainable recoveries.
Greater efforts are needed to seize international opportunities for human-capital development, to repatriate the
resulting
knowledge and expertise, and to spread what is learned to more people at home.
Moreover, Benn Steil and Benjamin Della Rocca of the Council on Foreign Relations find that cost increases
resulting
from the steel tariffs have already put as many as 40,000 US auto industry jobs at risk.
Following the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami – which devastated the coastlines of 11 countries,
resulting
in more than 150,000 deaths, a half-million injuries, and over $10 billion in damages – 168 governments agreed to the Hyogo Framework for Action (HFA), a comprehensive ten-year plan for reducing disaster risk.
But, as with today’s toxic assets, there was no market, and rapid disinvestment would have triggered fire-sale prices, depressing all asset values in the economy and
resulting
in more bank failures.
It enhanced competition,
resulting
in reduced prices and new services.
The economic damage
resulting
from environmental degradation is estimated to be roughly $7 trillion a year, much of it irreversible.
Our financial system’s current design all but guarantees what BoE Governor Mark Carney has called the “tragedy of horizons” – a market failure
resulting
from the inability of investors, companies, and governments to act on problems, such as climate change, with consequences that will be felt only far in the future.
Unemployment
resulting
from automation in the Chinese manufacturing sector could ultimately complicate China’s efforts to rebalance its economy toward increased domestic consumption – an objective that most economists agree is critical for the country’s long-term prosperity.
The fact that Afghanistan’s ethnic groups are concentrated in distinct geographical zones would simplify partition and make the
resulting
borders more likely to last, unlike those drawn by colonial officials, who invented countries with no national identity or historical roots.
If China and India replicate American per capita consumption of fossil fuels, the
resulting
greenhouse-gas emissions will only accelerate global warming.
The
resulting
high unemployment, particularly of young men, could foster political instability.
South Koreans no longer fear brutal dictatorship; they fear economic monopoly, and the
resulting
dearth of opportunity.
Social norms undervalue girls and women, with sex-selection abortions
resulting
in an estimated 1.3 million girls per year not being born in China and India alone.
The long-term consequences of the
resulting
surge in fiscal deficits are serious.
We cannot continue to pursue strategies that ignore our common exposure to global risks, and the
resulting
environment of mutual dependence.
Yet he has proved to be mainly, if not solely, interested in domestic issues,
resulting
in a foreign policy of reaction.
For example, the East Asian “Tigers” cut their birth rates precipitously in the 1970’s and 1980’s, and used the
resulting
demographic breathing room to stunning advantage through judicious education and health policies, sound macroeconomic management, and careful regional and global economic engagement.
But, since one country’s trade deficit is another’s surplus, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has argued for turning the conventional logic on its head: rather than
resulting
from a savings shortage, the US trade deficit is the result of a global savings glut – especially in China.
The
resulting
layoffs of Chinese factory workers has caused second-round declines in local demand for Chinese goods and services, as Chinese households cut back on their spending.
The Chinese authorities are determined to reverse the
resulting
decline in growth in order to reemploy those who have lost their jobs and to create employment for the millions of young people who join the labor force each year.
Moreover, the Bush and Clinton Administrations warned that Japan should not export its way out of trouble, as if a trade surplus
resulting
from export growth was somehow “unfair.”
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