Saving
in sentence
1808 examples of Saving in a sentence
So Germany is asked to take the lead in
saving
the eurozone, an outcome that is in the interest not only of the entire European community, but also of Germany, which is widely seen as having gained the greatest advantage from the single currency.
Greece’s banks will be pushed to the point of failure, making the costs of
saving
Greece and the eurozone prohibitively high.
Moreover, the data on personal
saving
suggest somewhat fewer vulnerabilities and more resilience in the household sector.
In nominal terms, the level of personal
saving
is nearly double what was reported over the prior four quarters.
Relative to disposable income, the personal
saving
rate is now estimated to be 6.8%, not the 3.2% reported in May.
Moreover, the
saving
rate has been moving sideways, at above 6%, over the past five years, rather than falling precipitously, as was previously thought.
The upward revisions go even further back, with the percentage differences between updated and prior data on nominal personal
saving
in double digits since the mid-1990s.
After all, households that are
saving
twice as much as previously suspected should be expected to be more resilient when confronted with rising interest rates.
The large increase in
saving
was offset by smaller increases in investment, inventory accumulation, and the statistical discrepancy.
This mobile-enabled information leads to better decision-making,
saving
the farmers money and boosting their resilience to extreme-weather patterns and droughts.
In short, by
saving
Ukraine, the EU could also save itself.
America’s massive trade deficit is a direct consequence of an unprecedented shortfall of domestic
saving.
The broadest and most meaningful measure of a country’s
saving
capacity is what economists call the “net national
saving
rate” – the combined
saving
of individuals, businesses, and the government.
It provides a measure of the
saving
that is available to fund expansion of a country’s capital stock, and thus to sustain its economic growth.
In the US, there simply is no net
saving
any more.
Since the fourth quarter of 2008, America’s net national
saving
rate has been negative – in sharp contrast to the 6.4%-of-GDP averaged over the last three decades of the twentieth century.
Never before in modern history has the world’s leading economic power experienced a
saving
shortfall of such epic proportions.
Without addressing the root of the problem – America’s chronic
saving
shortfall – it is ludicrous to believe that there can be a bilateral solution for a multilateral problem.
In an era of open-ended US government budget deficits and chronic shortfalls in personal saving, America is doomed to suffer subpar savings and massive multilateral trade deficits for as far as the eye can see.
In that vein, closing down trade with China, while failing to address the
saving
shortfall, is like putting pressure on one end of a water balloon.
It deflects attention away from those truly responsible for perpetuating the greatest
saving
shortfall in history.
In contrast, GiveWell estimates that the cost of
saving
a life by distributing bed nets in regions where malaria is a major killer is $3,400.
One such person is Tokyo 2020 Olympics President Yoshiro Mori, who has proposed a solution: adopt daylight
saving
time (DST), so that events scheduled for the morning, such as the marathon, can be held during cooler hours.
However, research shows that where health care is of low quality, training providers on basic protocols for diagnosing and treating common illnesses is very cost-effective,
saving
children’s lives for as little as $14.
A better way to understand a current-account surplus (or deficit) is as a measure of a country’s
saving
(or dissaving) toward the future.
If the US wants to reduce its own deficits, it should start
saving
more.
Painful deleveraging – less spending and more
saving
to reduce debt and leverage – remains ongoing in most advanced economies, which implies slow economic growth.
Third, China has had to rely on another round of monetary, fiscal, and credit stimulus to prop up an unbalanced and unsustainable growth model based on excessive exports and fixed investment, high saving, and low consumption.
And, because the country’s new leadership – which is conservative, gradualist, and consensus-driven – is unlikely to speed up implementation of reforms needed to increase household income and reduce precautionary saving, consumption as a share of GDP will not rise fast enough to compensate.
Most children in the world are now protected against measles, tetanus, whooping cough, diphtheria, and polio,
saving
around three million lives a year.
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