Rising
in sentence
4446 examples of Rising in a sentence
In a finite world, infinite growth is impossible, and
rising
output will not put food on everyone’s table if the benefits of growth are not fairly distributed.
Moreover, low inflation and periods of deflation did not prevent real incomes from
rising
in Japan.
Amateur historians ask breathlessly whether this could be the year of decisive change in the Middle East, the year when regime after regime falls prey to
rising
discontent with authoritarian rulers who have failed to deliver decent lives to their people.
The result is that, though economic difficulties –
rising
food and fuel prices, corruption, and unemployment – persist, they have not led to demonstrations calling for regime change.
For all of our lives, my generation has defined success in terms of
rising
GDP growth: more money in more pockets, more resources for public programs, and more jobs.
Indeed, the
rising
aspirations of Arab youth in Egypt and Tunisia, the wellspring of the Arab Spring, followed impressive economic growth that had failed to trickle down.
And such
rising
expectations have been visible in all large Muslim countries.
But whether the Fed tries to counteract it by raising interest rates more aggressively than its current forecasts imply, or decides to move cautiously, keeping short-term interest rates well behind the
rising
curve of price growth, bond investors will suffer.
But prices are already
rising
at a 20% annual pace, which, if unchecked, will lead to conflict with the powerful Peronist unions.
That open-ended statement, without any clear means to achieve the goal that it announced, has done much to fuel military escalation and the
rising
death toll in Syria, while pushing the US repeatedly to defend its “credibility” against a line in the sand that it should not have drawn.
Only when fiscal austerity is implemented (or at least threatened), and a population is faced with
rising
unemployment and widespread economic misery, is a country motivated to pursue them.
The massive injection of liquidity into China’s economy has contributed to
rising
debt, especially among local governments and firms, while fueling massive real-estate bubbles, and resulting in significant excess capacity.
Huge tax cuts and
rising
military spending have fueled an enormous rise in imports, and therefore a yawning trade deficit now accompanies America’s weak fiscal position.
That is why the prospect of
rising
German labor costs, after a decade of stasis, is actually one of the few positive economic developments on the European scene – hardly something that the ECB should resist.
A
rising
tide of Islamophobic rhetoric can be seen in Europe’s mainstream media and among its political parties – for example, the Danish People’s Party, the Dutch Freedom Party, the French National Front, the Swiss Peoples’ Party, the English Defense League, the Italian Northern League, and the Austrian Freedom Party.
And, given the
rising
risk of a global systemic financial meltdown, the prospect of a decade-long L-shaped recession – like the one experienced by Japan after the collapse of its real estate and equity bubble – cannot be ruled out.
All have in common not only economic and policy weaknesses (twin fiscal and current-account deficits, slowing growth and
rising
inflation, sluggish structural reforms), but also presidential or parliamentary elections this year.
This is not a complete surprise: in many countries, working classes and rural farmers have benefited from per capita income increases and a broadening social safety net, while the middle classes feel the pinch from
rising
inflation, poor public services, corruption, and intrusive government.
Indeed,
rising
income and wealth inequality in many emerging markets may eventually lead to a social and political backlash against liberalization and globalization.
The impact will be particularly powerful in emerging countries, where currencies are vulnerable to a
rising
dollar and tightening liquidity conditions in the US.
Unemployment is
rising
– and with it populist posturing.
Pick any indicator: trade relative to global GDP, capital flows relative to the global capital stock, and so forth – all are
rising.
Indeed, when China was awarded the Olympic Games in 2001, the country’s official news agency, Xinhua called it a “milestone in China’s
rising
international status and a historical event in the great renaissance of the Chinese nation.”
And, of course, the longer-term deficits, driven by baby-boomer retirements and
rising
health and pension costs per beneficiary, grow progressively worse thereafter (the commission will also recommend how to get the longer-term deficit under control).
The cost may seem significant in a world of
rising
unemployment rates, with many countries still struggling with ongoing financial and economic crises, and others staring bankruptcy in the face.
In 1994, Fini and Casini were around 40 years old and seen as
rising
stars of Italian politics.
Matters could get worse in 2011, as
rising
unemployment cuts household consumption.
Falling incomes and
rising
deficits could translate into less stable health-insurance markets and cuts to Medicaid, which reimburses prescriptions for naloxone, a drug used to reverse opioid overdoses.
Changes in pension policy are boosting public spending and contributing to
rising
levels of debt.
But, given
rising
inequality and growing disenchantment with politics and political parties, it addresses questions that remain relevant for representative democracy today.
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