Risks
in sentence
4376 examples of Risks in a sentence
Emerging markets are leading the recovery, but a number of them must contend with the
risks
of overheating and growing financial imbalances.
In emerging markets and low-income economies, the challenge is to avoid overheating, contain financial risks, and address pressing social spending needs, while not compromising sustainability.
But
risks
to the outlook are rising, and we need determined policy action to dampen them.
And while one shouldn’t overstate the
risks
of sustained ultra-low rates to financial stability, it is also wrong to dismiss them entirely.
But a slow exit
risks
creating a credit and asset bubble as large as the previous one, if not larger.
After all, host countries have been able to contain nuclear
risks
in the most challenging circumstances.
Such
risks
demand examination and planning.
The
risks
of such comparisons are almost too obvious for words.
Yet, rather than recognize the mounting
risks
of the non-transparent policy environment he has created, Modi has been discussing going even further, moving India to an entirely “cashless society.”
Such an outcome could split the rebels’ ranks and
risks
plunging Libya into renewed violence at the very moment that hostilities should have ended.
Short on skilled experts, a post-Qaddafi Libya
risks
becoming dependent on foreign assistance, much like the Palestinians, who live largely from international aid rather than from their own economic activity.
Some economists, like Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff of Harvard University, saw the dangers of the financial crisis, but greatly exaggerated the
risks
of public spending to boost employment in its aftermath.
Efforts to make the rules more flexible are a welcome development, but shortcomings remain, particularly given that implementation
risks
make the macroeconomic effects of rule changes difficult to quantify.
Independent national authorities would be better placed not only to assess implementation risks, but also to advocate for structural reforms.
What the IMF needs, as a first step towards comprehensive reform, is a new leader with solid technical training, a broad vision, and first hand experience in dealing with the macroeconomic
risks
faced by emerging and transition economies.
Bureaucratic enterprises are typically allergic to taking big
risks
– that is, developing and commercializing the radical innovations that push out the production-possibility frontier and generate large sustained jumps in productivity and thus in economic growth.
But the biggest
risks
are to European integration.
Financial panic in Asia emerged after years of growth so high and steady that international lenders and domestic borrowers became complacent about financial
risks.
Private funding that turns out to be public funding tied to the ruling family or government ministers presents different political and financial
risks
and should therefore be valued differently.
Fourth, the re-leveraging of the public sector through large fiscal deficits and debt accumulation
risks
crowding out a recovery in private-sector spending.
How one views these
risks
depends on the costs of undoing mistakes, which in turn depends on other properties of the inflation-unemployment relationship that Phelps’ analysis did not address.
In other words, individuals – usually assumed to be identical – fully use all available information to forecast the future in an environment of perfect competition, no capital market shortcomings, and full insurance of all
risks.
So the global economic
risks
now seem to be weighted on the downside, after a benign period.
These four
risks
are material and consequential, and each is growing in importance.
Capital inflows – which will undoubtedly increase in the coming years – are driven largely by investors’ interest in diversification and high yield, rather than the country’s image as a refuge from troubled financial markets elsewhere, especially given that China’s financial markets are relatively underdeveloped and beset by considerable
risks.
If it continues to allow such cases to go forward, it
risks
losing even more credibility among those Tibetans who, like the three environmentalists, have tried to stay within the law and avoid politics.
In an area full of suspicion and antagonism towards the state, expanding the targets of its political prosecutions from Tibetan protestors to environmentalists and from dissident monks to businessmen
risks
further undermining China’s own objectives in its most troubled region.
Their boom-and-bust character reflected nothing more than the relevant regulators’ failure – or refusal – to understand the
risks
involved.
Financial engineers and traders shared the same assumptions about the
risks
they were taking.
But to ignore the possibility that some such patients are SARS cases
risks
the start of new outbreaks.
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