Slower
in sentence
569 examples of Slower in a sentence
Just as China must embrace
slower
growth as a natural consequence of its rebalancing imperative, the rest of the world will need to figure out how to cope when it does.
And
slower
growth means lower revenues, which imply larger deficits and heavier debt burdens – at which point, as Wolfgang Munchau of the Financial Times and others have stressed, the entire belt-tightening exercise begins to look self-defeating.
Raising medicine prices reduces usage, leading to more illness, lower productivity, and
slower
GDP growth.
Despite the accident, global use of nuclear power looks set to grow steadily in the next 20 years, although at a
slower
rate than previously forecast.
Reflecting Xi’s belief that “sooner is better than later, and faster is better than slower,” at least seven of the 11 measures the central bank announced in April have already been completed.
In the short term, the world economy would face
slower
economic growth and the risk of greater financial instability.
The party is not over yet: global growth is expected to continue in 2019 and 2020, though at a
slower
pace.
Provinces with high levels of private insurance coverage, on the other hand, had lower employment rates and
slower
wage growth.
Slower
population growth and a demographically driven decline in the labor-force participation rate will reduce employment growth.
Assuming
slower
growth in the labor force than in the past decade, no rise in productivity due to capital accumulation, and a decline in multifactor productivity growth to its pre-2000 average implies that annual potential GDP growth will be only 1.4%.
Only one-quarter of this decline is due to
slower
economic growth; the remainder is attributable to an increasingly unequal distribution of income.
Largely as a result of a precipitous fall in exports, China is likely to continue to grow, but at a much
slower
pace than the 11-12% annual growth of recent years.
The migration crisis has appeared to be more acute in Italy because its system for processing asylum applications and repatriating those who do not qualify is
slower
than in other member states.
Slower
growth in the advanced economies has also weakened trade flows, adding to the headwinds.
As neither Germany’s unions nor its welfare state would accept falling wages, the result was higher unemployment and
slower
growth.
Two months of bad economic news, coupled with asset markets’ severe revaluations of the future – which also cause
slower
future growth, as falling asset prices lead firms to scale back investment – mean that a policy that was appropriate just 60 days ago is much too austere today.
Even if successful in the short run, the huge shift toward government spending will almost certainly lead to significantly
slower
growth rates a few years down the road.
Sharply raising the government’s already outsized profile in the economy will upset this delicate balance leading to
slower
growth in the future.
But the price for protecting workers and firms was
slower
growth and higher unemployment.
Investment decisions are postponed, implying
slower
growth and an even more precarious fiscal position.
But while some commentatorsseem to presume that
slower
growth calls for monetary easing, protectionist measures also increase prices, which has the opposite implication for monetary policy.
Slower
growth and higher prices are inevitable effects.
If only reforms were slower, corruption would not have grown as much.
The critics are right that with
slower
reforms there would be less corruption.
This is muddling through, Chinese style –considerably
slower
growth than the double-digit rates of the past, but not the hard landing that purveyors of doom and gloom warn is inevitable.
In addition, the moderation of inflationary pressure as a result of
slower
growth and cooling global commodity markets will allow Chinese and other Asian policymakers to shift their focus from containing economic overheating to rebalancing growth.
A paper written last year by Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, called “Growth in a Time of Debt,” has been widely quoted for its analysis of 44 countries over 200 years, which found that when government debt exceeds 90% of GDP, countries suffer
slower
growth, losing about one percentage point on the annual rate.
The topic of my panel was what President Xi Jinping has called the Chinese economy’s “new normal”: an era of relatively
slower
growth, following three decades of double-digit economic expansion.
Europe’s Franco-German Dream TeamPARIS – When the International Monetary Fund lowered its global growth forecast for 2014 and 2015 from 3.7% and 3.9%, respectively, to 3.3% and 3.8%, it cited the eurozone’s increasingly gloomy prospects, including significantly
slower
growth in Germany, as a leading cause.
Growth in health-care spending was
slower
in every OECD country in that year, with the exception of Germany.
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