Slowdown
in sentence
959 examples of Slowdown in a sentence
Faster growth in consumer spending would also reverse the recent
slowdown
in GDP growth, providing the extra demand needed to create employment for the millions of Chinese who are leaving agriculture and the millions more who are graduating from the country’s universities.
Real estate prices could well decline, with a strong likelihood, at the very least, of a
slowdown
in the rate of increase.
Similarly, some emerging-market currencies have come under renewed pressure in recent days, triggered in part by the devaluation of the Argentine peso and signs of a
slowdown
in Chinese growth, as well as doubts about these economies’ real strengths amid generally skittish market sentiment.
China’s
slowdown
and prolonged recession in parts of Europe have weakened demand in global commodity markets, depressing growth in commodity-exporting countries like Brazil, Russia, and South Africa.
The continent’s economies experienced a slowdown, but not a recession.
Investors are increasingly wary of a global financial meltdown, most likely emanating from Europe, but with the US fiscal cliff, political instability in the Middle East, and a
slowdown
in China all coming into play.
Second, a further
slowdown
in rich countries’ growth rates appears inevitable, given that even in the more dynamic countries the growth rates of the working-age population is declining.
More recently, many claimed that with the rise of China and the petro-states, an American
slowdown
could be decoupled from the rest of the world.
Indeed, if policymakers continue to sit on their hands, it is not hard to imagine a sharp global
slowdown
or even a devastating financial crisis.
The associated social disruption would by itself cause not just an economic slowdown, but a sustained decline in GDP and incomes.
Both cyclical and secular forces are behind the trade
slowdown.
Every high-growth, manufacturing-intensive Asian economy that has attempted it has suffered a massive
slowdown.
China’s Untapped Growth PotentialSHANGHAI – China’s economic slowdown, from a nearly 10% annual output gain in 2007 to below 8% today, has fueled widespread speculation about the economy’s growth potential.
But they each suffered a substantial
slowdown
(albeit less sharp than Japan’s).
External shocks also explain China’s GDP
slowdown
since 2007.
If it fails to take advantage of the opportunity provided by the cost shock and economic
slowdown
to implement the necessary structural reforms, China’s potential growth rate, as dictated by TFP, will never rebound fully.
Their
slowdown
will have an adverse impact on all emerging economies.
Since 2009, India has been expanding its deficit as a deliberate measure to counter its economic
slowdown.
At a minimum, a short-term growth
slowdown
is nearly certain; some wonder whether the destabilizing impact of capital-flow reversals will have longer-term adverse effects.
Chinese consumer spending has remained strong despite the
slowdown
in industrial output and investment and the government’s efforts to constrain spending on luxury goods.
In fact, barring the worst-case scenario under Trump, it is possible that the
slowdown
in global trade in recent years will turn out to be a temporary phenomenon.
In identifying the top “eight tasks” for 2016, Li put supply-side reforms at number two – second only to the government’s focus on economic stability in countering China’s growth
slowdown.
The trade war appears to be among the reasons for a renewed
slowdown
in China.
The Chinese slowdown, in turn, will have spillover effects on other countries, especially commodity exporters.
While emerging economies can deal with the economic
slowdown
in industrial countries, the financial-sector transmission mechanism is more challenging.
In part, India’s
slowdown
paradoxically reflects the substantial fiscal and monetary stimulus that its policymakers, like those in all major emerging markets, injected into its economy in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis.
For the most part, India’s current growth
slowdown
and its fiscal and current-account deficits are not structural problems.
It has also contributed to the economic
slowdown
in China, raising concerns (which I believe are exaggerated) that the country’s new leadership may have problems engineering a soft landing for an economy accustomed to double-digit (or high single-digit) growth.
Asia Enters the StormBERKELEY – As 2011 draws to a close, there are growing signs that Asia is becoming caught up in the global slowdown, dashing hopes that the region’s economies would “decouple” from the prolonged recession in Europe and America’s lackluster recovery.
Even if the euro crisis is resolved, austerity in Europe, along with anemic growth or worse in the US, will mean a
slowdown
in export-dependent Asia.
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