Supply
in sentence
3107 examples of Supply in a sentence
Environmentalists sometimes underestimate the benefits of technological and economic progress when they reason that a finite
supply
of resources must imply their eventual exhaustion.
Of course, such changes cost money, which is often in short
supply.
GDP growth is generated via the interaction between the
supply
side and the demand side of the economy.
In aggregate terms, growth of
supply
determines growth potential, and growth of demand determines the use of that potential.
For China, the
supply
side should be driven more by innovation and creation, rather than by increasing inputs.
Specifically, it should shift the intermediate target of monetary policy from expanding the money
supply
to lowering the benchmark interest rate.
In addition, Venezuela’s central bank has defaulted on its obligation to maintain price stability by nearly quadrupling the money
supply
in 24 months, which has resulted in a 90% decline in the bolivar’s value on the black market and the world’s highest inflation rate.
Third, because skills are necessary for nearly all activities in most of Africa, here and now, we need to organize ways to
supply
such skills to these countries.
They should begin by reforming the property-rights regime to enable market forces to balance the
supply
and demand of savings and investments in a manner that maintains credit discipline and transparency.
Japan’s New Monetary PolicyCAMBRIDGE: The economic world breathed easier when the Bank of Japan announced that it would expand Japan’s money
supply
in order to boost demand.
While government ran large deficits, the Bank of Japan kept the money
supply
tight.
Relatively slow growth in the money
supply
also led to deflation, worsening the problems of bad debts.
The de facto export ban on rare-earth elements – often referred to as “industrial vitamins” – struck a terrible blow to Japanese companies, which rely on China for 97% of their
supply.
A senior official of a Chinese company has said that, even though rare-earth exports have been restricted, Japanese companies can secure their
supply
by launching operations in China.
Romney is no exception, claiming that Bernanke has overinflated the money supply, and saying that, “I’d be looking for somebody new.”
Moreover, rapid economic and population growth in emerging markets is already putting strong upward pressure on the prices of food, water, and commodities, while limits to
supply
persist.
Why, then, was the European Commission’s proposed services directive, which would ensure freedom to
supply
services across the Union to all EU companies, vilified as the “Frankenstein directive”?
If countries began to define energy security as energy independence and try to
supply
all their own needs, the result could be expensive overcapacity, massive price distortions, slower technological progress, and weaker economic growth.
Everything else, including lack of a persistent economic upswing can and should be blamed on Europe's
supply
side.
The central bank cannot create growth in an economy that has a bad
supply
side; in the US, with highly competitive markets, the central bank can afford to stand by.
In Europe, where competition and flexibility are in short supply, indeed are disdained by political leaders, the central bank must be preemptive.
Only they can create the conditions for growth by allowing for a far more competitive
supply
side.
But it is hard to see even the smallest indication of a more competitive
supply
side.
This cannot be done simply by controlling the money
supply.
In order to preserve the value – and thus the credibility – of the V$, Fabbro proposes establishing a central bank to manage the money supply, thereby preventing excessive inflation.
The latter problem has only recently begun to surface in debates about “exit” strategies from sharply increased levels of public debt and money
supply.
Second, global leadership is likely to remain in very short
supply.
Unfortunately, many of the solutions on offer are either too timid or demand too much of a global leadership that is in short
supply.
Just as no government should outsource national security to untrustworthy foreigners, nor should any government permit the national food
supply
to rely on the supposed vagaries of foreign production.
Food self-sufficiency in staple cereals now stands at 28% on a calorie
supply
basis, with no signs of growth.
Back
Next
Related words
Demand
Chains
Global
Which
Would
Money
Their
Countries
Could
Prices
There
Energy
Chain
Growth
World
Other
Labor
Economy
Water
About