Rising
in sentence
4446 examples of Rising in a sentence
Among this generation’s most daunting challenges are food, water, and energy shortages; climate change and
rising
sea levels; and the spread of new, drug-resistant diseases.
(It is hard to tell whether Russia is
rising
or falling; either way, it is disturbing.)
Fitting a
rising
power into a decaying international system has rarely occurred peacefully.
Production costs (wages, office rents, land, capital, etc.) in China’s coastal provinces – where most of the country’s manufacturing and service production, as well as foreign direct investment, are located – have been
rising
fast.
In so doing, they should aim not only for big state-owned companies, but also for the
rising
number of vibrant, private small and medium-size enterprises in China that can be found in all sectors of the economy.
Most crucially, it is increasingly difficult to balance the goals of ensuring patient access to effective medicines, managing
rising
health-care expenditure, and incentivizing innovation.
In 2004, when he was still a
rising
star in the Senate, Obama had warned that failing to build a “purple America” that supports the working and middle classes would lead to nativism and political breakdown.
With policymaking having been subjected to the malign influence of a
rising
plutocracy, economists calling for “bold persistent experimentation” were swimming against the tide – even though well-founded economic theories justified precisely that course of action.
Nonetheless, where firms or industries are particularly vulnerable to reputational issues, image and ethics could be a significant factor in more marginal business decisions (particularly with
rising
costs and tougher labor regulations already causing some firms to look elsewhere).
Rising
living standards and a broad political consensus have provided the stability needed to allow the economy to grow strongly and diversify.
Pressure would be simultaneously placed on creditor and debtor countries to balance their accounts, by charging
rising
interest rates on persistent imbalances.
Since 2000, America's excess productive capacity has outstripped the Euro area and Japan combined, its economy growing far more slowly than its 3.5% to 4% annual potential, with US unemployment
rising.
Their main concern is the falling growth rate - from 9% in 2000 to 3.5-4% this year - yet output statistics keep
rising.
Data from the US –
rising
unemployment, falling household consumption, still declining industrial production, and a weak housing market – suggest that America’s recession is not over yet.
A second reason to fear a double-dip recession concerns the fact that oil, energy, and food prices may be
rising
faster than economic fundamentals warrant, and could be driven higher by the wall of liquidity chasing assets, as well as by speculative demand.
The global economy, barely
rising
from its knees, could not withstand the contractionary shock if similar speculative forces were to drive oil rapidly towards $100 a barrel.
So the end of this severe global recession will be closer at the end of this year than it is now, the recovery will be anemic rather than robust in advanced economies, and there is a
rising
risk of a double-dip recession.
The challenges that Ramaphosa has inherited –
rising
inequality, a growing wage gap, and jobless growth – are not unique, even if they are extreme.
But we know that banks that are healthy when the market is
rising
can quickly fall sick when it reverses.
Europe’s
Rising
Global RoleBRUSSELS – Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War, the contours of world order remain in the making.
But this change has come at a high cost, including
rising
natural gas prices.
Of course, China’s
rising
national income will help the country confront the challenges it faces.
On the national level, inequality is rising, but only in some places.
Doing so would certainly be a good start to combating
rising
wealth inequality.
The EU’s ambition to become a global player on an equal footing with existing and
rising
powers is neither understood by EU citizens nor viewed as credible in policy terms, as demonstrated by the reemergence of the United States as a decisive European player.
This is not just a matter of lost capabilities and
rising
poverty; persistently high unemployment also leads to social unrest, erosion of trust in political leaders and institutions, and the mounting risk of a lost generation.
In this view, the Federal Reserve should aggressively pursue low unemployment, until it is shown that inflation is
rising.
But the warning quotient has been
rising
in recent weeks.
A
rising
dollar, and an investment flight to the US, is accentuating these countries’ self-generated problems.
The probability of provoking a nuclear war is high and
rising.
Back
Next
Related words
Prices
Which
Growth
Economic
Inequality
Their
Global
Countries
Rates
World
Levels
Unemployment
While
Power
Inflation
Would
Other
Could
Economy
About