Rising
in sentence
4446 examples of Rising in a sentence
The stock imbalances include large and
rising
public and private debt as a share of GDP.
In today’s context of climate change,
rising
demand, population growth, increasing pollution, and overexploited resources, everything must be done to consolidate the legal framework for managing the world’s watersheds.
A second economic argument is that immigration will rejuvenate the labor force and stabilize public finances, because young, imported workers will generate the taxes required to support a
rising
number of pensioners.
And the current trajectory, with the burden of
rising
health-care costs increasingly being shifted onto patients themselves, is not encouraging.
As Robert Zoellick, a former US Trade Representative and World Bank president, has argued, if a
rising
China contributes to the provision of global public goods, the US should encourage the Chinese to become a “responsible stakeholder.”
And I argued that a strong labor market and
rising
business profits would be among Abenomics’ enduring legacies, even if Abe’s administration faced political challenges.
If anything has been laid to rest by China’s
rising
wealth, it is the comforting idea that capitalism, and the growth of a prosperous bourgeoisie, will inevitably lead to liberal democracy.
Rising
spreads in Spain and Italy show that contagion is already occurring, even in the absence of an official decision to write down Greek debt.
The alternative to European engagement in the Western Balkans is
rising
nationalism and a possible return to violent conflict.
This certainly seems to be the market psychology in China and India, where rapidly
rising
incomes and newly successful people are widely expected to put pressure on markets for land, real estate, and construction materials.
Before the real estate boom of the late 1970’s, hardly anyone was worried about
rising
home prices.
For example, an article in The Times of London in 1970 argued that
rising
home prices reflected the switch to a new British Standard Time (imposed as a three-year experiment in 1968 to facilitate commerce with Western Europe by putting Britain in the same time zone).
To understand the nature of the subsequent shift, consider that it is hard to find anyone today who worries that automobile prices will soar because
rising
demand in China and India for steel and other materials will push automobile prices out of reach in the future.
High and rapidly
rising
home prices tend to stimulate new housing supply, which in turn tends to undermine prices.
The US needs fiscal measures that both curb the deficit and contain
rising
income inequality – and the inequality of opportunity that it begets.
Fourth,
rising
job losses lead to greater demands for protectionist measures, as governments are pressured to save domestic jobs.
This leads to a policy dilemma:
rising
unemployment rates are forcing politicians in the US and other countries to consider additional fiscal stimulus programs to boost sagging demand and falling employment.
But, despite persistent deflationary pressure through 2010,
rising
budget deficits, high financial-sector bailout costs, continued monetization of deficits, and eventually unsustainable levels of public debt will ultimately lead to higher expected inflation – and thus to higher interest rates, which would stifle the recovery of private demand.
The irrational exuberance that drove a three-month bear-market rally in the spring is now giving way to a sober realization among investors that the global recession will not be over until year end, that the recovery will be weak and well below trend, and that the risks of a double-dip W-shaped recession are
rising.
This will create space for
rising
powers like China, but it will also expose the world to a period of heightened geopolitical uncertainty.
The world's largest economy, the United States, needs the North American Free Trade Agreement, and Southeast Asia's
rising
economies need ASEAN.
While rapid growth in developing countries has been an important factor in the
rising
commodity prices, much of this is beyond their control.
Because its market grew faster than its tax, regulatory, and judicial arrangements could evolve, the country was beset by
rising
income inequality, pollution, financial risks, and corruption – all of which must be addressed in the next phase of structural reforms.
Meanwhile, Chinese young people and low-income households worry about high and
rising
home prices, job insecurity, and the fast-growing market power of a few tech giants squeezing small and medium-size enterprises.
Asset prices fell, households began a lengthy process of deleveraging, savings rose, and government – faced with falling revenues and
rising
expenditures on unemployment insurance – could not make up the difference.
To be viable, policy measures must include comprehensive tax reform; a balanced deficit-reduction program; investment in education, skills upgrading, infrastructure, and technology; and a fully developed energy policy that anticipates
rising
relative energy prices as emerging-market growth enlarges the global economy to three times its current size over the next quarter-century.
People simply don’t know whether their governments are going to start making progress in combating deflationary pressure, countering
rising
inequality, addressing social and political fragmentation, and restoring economic growth and employment.
A key element of that policy mix would focus on tackling
rising
inequality.
On the basis of those reforms, and a new WHO agenda on global health, Dr. Bruntland made the extremely modest request that the core WHO budget from the donor countries should be raised sufficiently to absorb
rising
costs due to inflation and exchange rate changes.
The result is a continuing disaster for the poorest countries, where the burden of infectious disease is
rising
starkly, in diseases ranging from Malaria, to HIV/AIDs and Tuberculosis.
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