Slower
in sentence
569 examples of Slower in a sentence
Indeed, China must stem the pace of real-estate investment, which accounted for more than 13% of GDP in recent years – a move that will undoubtedly lead to
slower
economic growth and, in turn, reduce the profitability of China’s nonfinancial corporates further.
Third, the Trump administration’s trade disputes with China, Europe, Mexico, Canada, and others will almost certainly escalate, leading to
slower
growth and higher inflation.
Sixth, Europe, too, will experience
slower
growth, owing to monetary-policy tightening and trade frictions.
Slower
economic growth will cause a shortfall of jobs for new entrants to the workforce, thereby increasing the incidence of poverty.
Moreover, verbal intervention will be followed by policy action, because
slower
growth and low inflation – partly triggered by a strong dollar – will induce the Fed to exit zero policy rates later and more slowly than expected.
Acceptance of the market economy has been slower, but that, too, has begun since the encyclical Centesimus Annus of John Paul II.Eastern Christian Orthodoxy is, however, a different matter.
When that algorithm parses a tweet from the AP containing important keywords (explosion, White House, and Obama), it will send orders to sell with the expectation that the market will drop as others – first,
slower
algorithms, then even
slower
humans – start to process the same news.
But it proved to be a great disappointment in terms of foreign investment inflows and economic growth, which has averaged 2.6% per year over the last two decades –
slower
than Peru, Chile, Colombia, Brazil, and Uruguay.
This is especially crucial for poor countries, where
slower
global growth means continuing hardship.
Bangladesh has gone down that road, substituting such policies for macro-level reforms, and is developing at a far
slower
pace than India, where macro-level reforms came first.
Yes, UK growth has been slightly slower, but the British economy has also faced, among other factors, the headwind of sharply falling North Sea oil production during this period, whereas the US benefited from a shale-oil boom.
Without that investment, economic growth will be
slower
and the standard of living lower than it would otherwise be.
With the employment content of a unit of Chinese output more than 35% higher in services than in manufacturing and construction, China could actually hit its employment target with
slower
GDP growth.
Rising interest rates on corporate bonds portend
slower
growth in the US.
Businesses have marked down their pre-crisis investment plans to reflect a post-crisis “new normal” of
slower
and more uncertain growth in demand for their output.
Education spending is still caught between humanitarian aid, which focuses on the most basic necessities for survival, such as food, shelter, and medicine, and development aid programs, which are planned over years and are
slower
to respond to crises.
The growing role of the government, and the shrinking role of the private sector, almost surely portends
slower
growth later this decade.
Not all regions will necessarily have
slower
economic expansion in the decade ahead.
In a world where private aggregate demand is weak and unconventional monetary policy eventually becomes like pushing on a string, the case for
slower
fiscal consolidation and productive public infrastructure spending is compelling.
The almighty American consumer had another banner year in 2005, helping sustain global economic growth, albeit at a
slower
pace than in 2004.
In the first cross-country empirical study to examine this question, published 20 years ago, I showed that higher perceived corruption (based on surveys of investors) led to
slower
economic growth, in large part through lower rates of private investment.
While this pace would be significantly
slower
than the 9.7% growth the country has averaged since 1979, it is undeniably fast by international standards.
Is this China’s “new normal,” or should the country anticipate even
slower
growth in the coming decade?
Given that declining rates of extreme poverty would seem to imply incomes high enough to avoid hunger, this substantially
slower
progress on hunger than on poverty raises awkward questions.
This has resulted in
slower
growth across the developing world, home to more than 80% of the world population.
From the US to Europe to Japan – crisis-battered developed economies that collectively account for more than 40% of Chinese exports – end-market demand is likely to grow at a
slower
pace in the years ahead than it did during China’s export boom of the past 30 years.
Can an Argentine president promote disinflation and retain voter support during a period of
slower
growth, or even recession?
Slower
global growth and consequently lower oil prices are not good for countries such as Putin’s Russia and Iran.
With
slower
growth and more normal interest rates, the debt ratio could easily rise to more than 100% in 2021, and exceed 150% by 2030.
Now that Latin America has entered a period of
slower
economic growth, these achievements are being put to the test.
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