Rises
in sentence
480 examples of Rises in a sentence
Governments must therefore focus explicitly on the pace of total price
rises.
But the fall of Bo and his family hardly
rises
to the level of Shakespearean tragedy.
With every month that the economy loses productive capacity, the likelihood of stagnation and deflation
rises.
For example, the relative independence of the BBC, sometimes a source of consternation to British governments, has paid rich dividends in credibility, as illustrated by this account of Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete’s day: “he
rises
at dawn, listens to the BBC World Service, then scans the Tanzanian press.”
If the journey to the crossroads is accelerated by a large geopolitical shock (originating in, say, the Middle East or North Korea) and/or a serious political breakdown in Europe (for example, a meltdown in Cyprus or prolonged political paralysis in Italy), the probability of taking the adverse path
rises
to an uncomfortably high level.
A country’s property rights in foreign oil assets are likely to diminish as the oil price
rises.
How to assess countries’ claims to Arctic territory hinges on the status of the Lomonosov Ridge, a vast formation that
rises
from the sea floor and stretches 1,800 kilometers from Greenland to the East Siberian continental shelf.
If the Yellow Vests build a movement that
rises
to the height of Macron’s, it may end up writing a page in the history of France.
With the inflow of cheap money, public spending rises, and politicians thrive on distributing subsidies and preserving inefficient jobs to broaden their electoral appeal.
If inflow exceeds outflow, prevalence
rises.
If desirable real estate is in scarce supply, credit creation and allocation can at times be driven not by rational analysis of alternative investment projects, but by self-reinforcing cycles in which more credit drives asset prices higher, which then sustains expectations of further rises, leading to more borrowing demand and credit supply.
The graph below shows very clearly how closely confidence
rises
and falls with GDP growth.
As a result, public employment, which usually
rises
during recoveries, has been a major contributor to high unemployment during the last three years.
In the US, the interest rate on government bonds now
rises
from 1.80% at five years to 2.86% for 10-year bonds and 3.70% for 30-year bonds.
The biggest risk here is that markets may try to test the Fed under its new leadership, for example, if inflation
rises
faster than anticipated.
Moreover, an influential paper by the American economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff suggests that economic growth falls sharply when a country’s public debt
rises
above 90% of GDP.
While treating MDR-TB remains possible, doing so is arduous, with a treatment time of roughly two years, using drugs that are neither as efficient nor as benign as canonical drugs – and at a cost that
rises
by a factor of 10-100.
Nowadays, indeed, instead of deepening disparities in standards of living in Europe, which was the historic norm, differences are actually blurring as the quality of life everywhere in Europe
rises.
As the Chinese economy slows and default risk grows, the value of state guarantees rises, directing capital away from private-sector growth.
The result would be catastrophic changes like unmanageable sea-level rises, devastating heat waves, and persistent droughts that create unprecedented challenges in terms of food security, ecosystems, health, and infrastructure.
As the late-coming speculators go bankrupt, the share of non-performing loans on banks’ balance sheets rises, forcing banks to reduce credit further.
Continued low interest rates allow unsuccessful companies to struggle on, slowing productivity growth; asset-price
rises
exacerbate inequality; and monetary stimulus works only by reigniting the private credit growth that generated the debt overhang in the first place.
In particular, China, India, and Indonesia – the region’s main drivers of economic growth – have experienced significant
rises
in income inequality.
The French nineteenth-century statesman Alphonse de Lamartine wrote an ode to European unity along rationalist lines, entitled the Marseillaise of Peace: “In the course of enlightenment, the world
rises
to unity/I am the fellow citizen of every thinking person/Truth is my country.”
The main reason is simple: as debt is reduced, its price
rises
in the secondary market, sharply curtailing the benefits to the borrower.
The WHO will continue to be squeezed for funds, while the urgency of its mission
rises
by the day.
According to the French economist Thomas Piketty, income inequality
rises
when the return on capital exceeds economic growth, meaning that, by itself, faster economic growth would reduce inequality.
For a country with a balanced current account, a deficit can arise if its investment rate rises, its saving rate falls, or some combination of the two occurs.
As the value of mechanical skills in the labor market declines and income inequality rises, this difference is likely to become increasingly pronounced.
But if a failing mega-bank runs out of cash during such a delay, the risk that its bankruptcy will be disorderly – as with Lehman Brothers in 2008 – rises, as does the potential that it will wreak havoc on the real economy.
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