Struggling
in sentence
1212 examples of Struggling in a sentence
Germany certainly could help
struggling
eurozone economies if it bought more of their goods and services.
Already
struggling
with low gas prices, increased competition, and now falling production Gazprom will be hard pressed to come up with the necessary funds without sacrificing urgent infrastructure projects.
For example, such foundations supported
struggling
Russian universities after the Soviet Union’s collapse, helping them to regain their status while rebuilding academic programs in all disciplines.
This left a vacuum in both countries, with Russia’s government
struggling
to justify an elected autocracy, and China’s one-party dictatorship seeking a new source of legitimacy.
As even children know, the CAP is a handsome and totally undeserved present to wealthy European (especially French) farmers at the expense of the
struggling
farmers of developing countries and EU consumers.
Pension funds, insurance companies, and mutual funds in the US manage combined assets totaling roughly $30 trillion, and they have been
struggling
to find investments that match their long-term obligations.
He will also visit Myanmar (Burma) in an effort to lend support to that
struggling
country’s extraordinary changes and encourage further progress.
But, like the
struggling
countries of southern Europe, France has few options.
With advanced economies
struggling
to avoid financial collapse, escape recession, reduce unemployment, and restore growth, central banks are being called upon to address, sometimes simultaneously, growing imbalances.
Meanwhile, other African countries – such as Angola and Somalia – are
struggling
to make any progress at all, as indicated in the ALMA scorecard for accountability and action.
Indeed, refusal to support Georgia’s
struggling
democracy would most likely postpone democratic progress in Ukraine, Belarus, even in Russia itself.
Instead of visiting Russians
struggling
to manage their difficult lives, Nemtsov and Chubais touted themselves as modern men flying about in private jets and fiddling with laptops.
Indeed, China cannot continue to rely on manufacturing exports when its major sources of demand – the US and Europe – are
struggling
and its labor costs are rising.
Moreover, during the euro’s existential crisis in July 2012, Merkel supported European Central Bank President Mario Draghi’s initiative to create an “outright monetary transactions” mechanism, whereby the ECB could purchase the bonds of
struggling
eurozone countries.
While the United States and Europe are still
struggling
to overcome a serious economic crisis, many NAM members, such as India, Chile, and Singapore, have maintained relative strong growth and form a part of new global governance structures, such as the G-20.
This could take the air out of incipient assets bubbles that might be forming and ease pressures on institutional investors who are
struggling
to find the yield they need to meet their insurance and pension commitments.
The euro crisis has transformed an ever-closer union of equal sovereign states, willingly sacrificing a share of their independence for the common good, into an association of creditor and debtor countries, with the debtors
struggling
to meet the creditors’ terms.
Turkey’s real strengths are its flourishing economy, secular democratic system, and ability to mediate between its Western allies and a region that is
struggling
to join the mainstream of the twenty-first century.
Many emerging-country exporters,
struggling
to retain customers in the wobbly US and European markets, feel otherwise.
Neither party even mentions the poor, who now officially make up 15% of the population but in fact are even more numerous, when we count all those households
struggling
with health care, housing, jobs, and other needs.
In fact, the EU has been
struggling
to tackle collectively the challenges it faces – in particular, the refugee crisis, which has already strained passport-free travel within the Schengen Area (one of the most visible, celebrated, and appreciated achievements of European integration).
Japan,
struggling
against two decades of stagnation and deflation, had to resort to Abenomics to avoid a quintuple-dip recession.
In emerging-market countries that are already
struggling
with the impact of rapid currency appreciation on their competitiveness, expansionary measures announced in recent weeks by the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan have heightened the sense of alarm at the Fed’s decision.
The global economic crisis that began in 2008 exposed the deep flaws in Europe’s monetary union, though it took the near-death experience of the euro crisis of 2010-2012 to force Europe’s leaders to act, by creating a large fund to help
struggling
countries and establishing a banking union.
Some interpret it to mean that the eurozone has de facto become a fixed exchange-rate system, where exit might actually be preferable for a
struggling
country and its more competitive partners.
Yet at Cancun, Mexico earlier this summer, it refused to open its markets even to exports from
struggling
African economies.
Struggling
to contain costs, health-care payers are also among its beneficiaries.
Despite glimmers of hope, the eurozone and Japan are
struggling
to cross the 1% threshold for annual economic growth.
Of course, after gaining their independence, some of these new nation-states have been
struggling
to develop democratic institutions and viable economies.
The economy is still
struggling
to provide a sufficient number of jobs for those who were previously employed in leverage-driven activities that are no longer sustainable (let alone desirable).
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