Trends
in sentence
1168 examples of Trends in a sentence
These adverse
trends
have been exacerbated by domestic politics.
To ensure food security, governments must work quickly to reverse these trends, and one place to start is by policing the producers who are feeding the frenzy.
We are currently in discussions with 20 possible contributors, underscoring the message that if we achieve universal education, per capita GDP in the poorest countries will be almost 70% higher by 2050 than if current
trends
continued.
And these
trends
are set to intensify: by 2050, the continent’s total population is expected to exceed 2.5 billion, with 55% living in urban environments.
Together, these
trends
have fed the widespread perception that there are no alternative forms of EU governance, and that Europe is being run by elites who have little concern for the interests of the people they are supposed to be serving.
It is impossible to know whether these early
trends
will hold through the rest of the primaries, now turning to the South and Midwest.
Even so, there are positive
trends.
Of course, these
trends
need not have led to a clash.
These
trends
will only accelerate as Putin’s regime intensifies its assault on the field.
Yet, in addition to higher yields, three secular
trends
underpin the case for investing in emerging markets across global business cycles.
That said, each of these
trends
has implications that must also be factored into investment decisions.
Failure to implement such coordinated policy measures – to sustain global aggregate demand at a time when deflationary
trends
are still severe in advanced economies – could lead to a very dangerous and damaging double-dip recession in advanced economies.
What is perhaps less recognized is how those
trends
have accelerated in the United States itself in recent decades.
But the narrow focus on the political and economic implications for Scotland and the UK – or, for that matter, the referendum’s decisive pro-union outcome – should not overshadow one of the more overlooked geopolitical
trends
of our time: the rise of small countries.
Given these trends, the search for more robust growth models will take much longer and be more complicated than many recognize – especially as the world economy pivots away from unfettered globalization and high levels of leverage.
These
trends
will become more difficult to reconcile and keep orderly if governance systems fail to adjust.
With household consumption accounting for about 70% of the US economy, that 2.7-percentage-point gap between pre-crisis and post-crisis
trends
has been enough to knock 1.9 percentage points off the post-crisis trend in real GDP growth.
To appreciate fully the unique character of this consumer-demand shortfall,
trends
over the past 21 quarters need to be broken down into two distinct sub-periods.
In light of regional trends, the military may be right to worry.
Nigerian, Indonesian, and Vietnamese young people will shape global work
trends
at an increasingly rapid pace.
But wresting power back from regional and international institutions – however shadowy and distant they may seem – would only compound the problem, for it would reduce the ability to guide the supranational
trends
that are shaping the world’s future.
The Fed is therefore trying to tamp down expectations concerning future interest-rate levels, by suggesting that changes in demography and productivity
trends
imply lower real rates in the future.
The explosive nature of current trends, which point to eventual re-nationalization of sovereignty from the bottom up, is greatly underestimated in Berlin.
At a time when many people are despairing about current political trends, the penultimate paragraph of On What Matters, Volume Three encourages us to take a longer and more optimistic perspective:“Life can be wonderful as well as terrible, and we shall increasingly have the power to make life good.
But this progress could be jeopardized if current debt
trends
in some countries continue.
As the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change highlights in its most recent report, money is the key to addressing global warming, which means that any strategy must account for
trends
in green investment.
The most important of these
trends
is developing countries’ growing role in financing green investments.
Still, policies that produced more broadly shared and environmentally sustainable growth would be far better than policies that perpetuate current distributional
trends
and exacerbate many Americans’ woes.
Poor nations look to these facts and
trends
with hope, while many industrialized countries view them with anxiety.
Longer-term
trends
in how money is used internationally – particularly as a store of value for foreign investors or central banks – are far more telling.
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