Turmoil
in sentence
701 examples of Turmoil in a sentence
Recognizing the significance of this strategy exposes a common fallacy whereby the global savings glut is attributed to emerging-market countries’ desire to insure themselves against financial
turmoil
by acquiring dollar reserves.
The region has been badly hit by the economic crisis, made all the worse by internal political
turmoil
and serious security dangers.
With Islamist terrorism spilling across its borders, India can no longer leave the
turmoil
in the Arab world to others to manage.
This book [Financial Turmoil] is a testament to my concern.
As in the case of Brexit, Poland’s domestic political
turmoil
reveals how intertwined the EU’s member states have become.
The recent market
turmoil
has started the deflation of the global asset bubble wrought by QE, though the expansion of unconventional monetary policies may feed it for a while longer.
“Brexit,” which has thrown global markets into
turmoil
and raised serious questions about the Union’s future, has eclipsed the release of the security strategy, which barely got a mention in the conclusions of the latest European Council summit.
That Japan had nothing to offer Thailand in its moment of
turmoil
is testimony to how irrelevant Hatoyama’s leadership had made the country.
Now, the EU must act fast – not least by ending the post-referendum market
turmoil
– if it is to survive.
Indeed, the latest bout of
turmoil
began with Trump’s sudden firing on May 9 of FBI director James Comey.
After a decade of horrific turmoil, Russia’s economy is at last turning around.
The Trouble with Emerging MarketsLAGOS – The financial
turmoil
that hit emerging-market economies last spring, following the US Federal Reserve’s “taper tantrum” over its quantitative-easing (QE) policy, has returned with a vengeance.
Moreover, the deep causes of last year’s
turmoil
in emerging markets have not disappeared.
Even if Golden Dawn – a neo-Nazi party in appearance and content – had not engaged in violence, its extreme anti-immigrant stance and its incitement of hatred at a moment of great social and economic
turmoil
would have made it a plausible candidate for a ban.
While conventional wisdom attributes political
turmoil
and instability to economic hardship, reality is rarely so neat.
Civil society had been energized by the Maidan revolution that ousted former President Viktor Yanukovych, but it was in
turmoil.
Still, after years of rising
turmoil
and uncertainty, we have no choice but to assume that more “black swan” events are around the corner.
But now that unpredictability is the order of the day, and a collective “me first” outlook has taken hold, we should prepare for the possibility that
turmoil
could go global.
The second lesson of the Argentine crisis is that a short period of political
turmoil
can cost surprisingly little compared to a long period of mindless pursuit of misconceived policies.
Moreover, campus
turmoil
is often perceived as a sign of societal disorder.
The repercussions of bombing Iran should be clear: closure of the Straits of Hormuz, skyrocketing oil prices, possible retaliation against Israel (regardless of the origin of the attack), and even greater
turmoil
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
If threats and violence from the Taliban prevent too many Afghans from casting their vote, the legitimacy of the outcome could be questioned, possibly inciting even more turmoil, which Afghanistan’s fledging security forces would struggle to contain.
While none on its own would have threatened the world economy, the danger stemmed from a self-reinforcing interaction among them: weak economic data leads to financial turmoil, which induces policy blunders that in turn fuel more financial panic, economic weakness, and policy mistakes.
It turned out that there was enormous excess capacity, and import substitution soon began, even in the midst of financial
turmoil.
Indeed, even with the
turmoil
of default and devaluation, and despite the usual 12-18-month lag in the impact of devaluation, Russia was growing at 5.4% annually by the end of 1999.
The economic and moral costs of escalating repression would eventually lead to domestic
turmoil
that not even the world’s most powerful one-party state could conceal.
In both 1978 and 1992, the immediate aftermath was a substantial period of economic and political
turmoil.
This would keep the economy running, despite the political turmoil, and it would signal to Ukrainians that the EU and the US – governments and private investors alike – are committed to them.
My answer is a straightforward no, but that the recent episode of global financial market
turmoil
is likely to be more serious than any period of volatility and risk-off behavior since 2009.
Finally, the European Union and the eurozone could be ground zero of global financial
turmoil
this year.
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