Rising
in sentence
4446 examples of Rising in a sentence
As a result, total compensation per hour is
rising
more rapidly, with the annual rate increasing to 3.1% in the first quarter of 2015, from 2.5% in 2014 as a whole and 1.1% in 2013.
Citizens complain about income, inequality, or
rising
house prices, not about the lack of jobs.
There is a legitimate fear that they could start
rising
abruptly; but, after so many years of inflation undershooting, it is a risk worth taking.
For example,
rising
tensions with Iran could compel Europe to deploy its navies to form a blockade around the Persian Gulf, in order to ensure the transit of oil.
If environmental degradation and
rising
inequality make economic growth such a mixed blessing, is the US government wrong to focus on it so much?
By contrast, today’s defenders of the European status quo must fight on two fronts: against Trump’s encroachments and, within Europe, against the likes of Matteo Salvini and Luigi di Maio, the
rising
stars of Italian politics who, despite their parliamentary majority, were denied the right to form a government by the country’s besieged pro-establishment president.
Looking ahead, the IMF predicts that Greece will have a gradually
rising
primary surplus and a gradually declining overall deficit over the next several years.
Private-sector deleveraging continued, but was counter-balanced by
rising
public-sector deficits and debt.
The second item on the agenda is a pull-back from quantitative easing in the US, which is subjecting the emerging economies to a flood of capital,
rising
commodity prices, inflation, and asset bubbles.
That structural shift, in combination with the renminbi’s strengthening effective real exchange rate relative to the dollar, owing to inflation and rapidly
rising
wages in export sectors, offers hope that China’s surplus will fall.
Consumer confidence is
rising.
Inward FDI could increase by as much as 83% annually by 2020; in the pharmaceutical industry alone, FDI could reach as much as $77 billion, with R&D
rising
to $4.2 billion and 44,000 new jobs being created.
But while it is true that some global developments – especially falling commodity prices, and perhaps also slowing emerging-economy growth and
rising
financial volatility – may push down inflation, dollar appreciation will not, at least not in any meaningful way.
And
rising
real incomes increased leisure time, thereby boosting demand for smiles and the products of minds.
Standing on the streets of one of these vibrant cities, one gains a deeper appreciation of recent data on China’s
rising
domestic consumption.
Their
rising
prosperity is also reflected in the retail sectors of Tokyo and Seoul, where increasingly wealthy Chinese tourists engage in “binge shopping.”
The central bank’s new focus on inflation is unlikely to help matters, either, because it will undermine economic activity and exacerbate the pain experienced by the most vulnerable, for whom unemployment may be worse than
rising
prices.
And, while
rising
global concern about income inequality has put some wind in Francis’s sails, his agenda has yet to make an impact on Catholic policymakers like Republican US Congressmen Paul Ryan and John Boehner or powerful figures in the Church.
First, prohibiting oil exports is more painful when world oil prices are
rising.
To fill it, the government printed money, effectively devaluing the currency and exacerbating inflation from
rising
prices for imported goods.
In addition, at a time when the Chinese economy is slowing and regional tensions are
rising
because of China’s muscle flexing in the South and East China Seas, Xi seems eager to radiate peace-loving ambitions.
Alongside
rising
trade and current-account surpluses, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) maintained a policy of intervening in the foreign-exchange market to dampen appreciation, thereby amassing huge foreign exchange reserves.
That doctrine, by imposing austerity in a period of
rising
unemployment, threatens to push the eurozone into a vicious deflationary debt spiral from which it will be difficult to escape.
Record-high food and energy prices, combined with sharply
rising
wages in China, are pushing up inflation in much of the world.
Rising
prices directly affect these countries’ ability to feed themselves at an acceptable cost.
Now that oil prices have plateaued, private investment is falling, domestic firms are idling, and unemployment is
rising.
The Muslim-majority region from West Africa to Central Asia is the world’s largest populous dry region, a 5,000-mile (8,000 kilometers) swath of water stress, desertification,
rising
temperatures, and food insecurity.
There is a resource crunch, epitomized by the
rising
prices of non-oil commodities over the last decade.
Rising
inflows of private capital have been accompanied by large-scale national energy-sector reforms, which should help increase the availability of electricity.
Even in the US, the economic insecurity of a vast white underclass that feels threatened by immigration and global trade can be seen in the
rising
influence of the extreme right and Tea Party factions of the Republican Party.
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