Sentences with phrase «gdp growth rates»

Both Dallas and Denver saw GDP growth rates of 4.5 percent, and apartment rent growth of 7.5 percent (Denver) and 4.6 percent (Dallas).
These markets saw one - year per capita GDP growth rates above 5 percent, but only Corpus Christi had rent growth above 3 percent.
Rounding out the top five metros, San Francisco and San Jose recorded per capita GDP growth rates of 9.3 percent and 6.2 percent respectively, in line with apartment rent growth rates of 6.8 percent and 8.8 percent.
This could be a short - term stimulus - driven trend caused by government efforts to prop up GDP growth rates that were falling too fast for their liking.
Consider the contrasting GDP growth rates of California and Texas.
Right now I think our goal should be zero population growth and simply accepting lower gdp growth rates as ok.
Putting that aside I can see a longer term centuries scale scenario where falling population growth and modeately falling consumption / gdp growth rates intersect to for a sustainable level, but still a decent level of technology and quality of life.
You have made no comment on what gdp growth rates you prefer, and yet criticise my views on gdp growth.
If debt across the economy is growing at more than twice GDP growth rates that is a time to raise rates, and make it hard to borrow.
This has gotten too long, but one thing that I will try over the next few days is estimate Nominal GDP growth rates for nations in the «ring of fire,» and their Government's financing rates.
I'd respectfully disagree: i) I suspect the reduced absolute level & dispersion in major market GDP growth rates doesn't much lend itself to such studies, and ii) naturally the major / large - cap indices are priced pretty efficiently, so any advantage to be gained from (as I said) a marginally better growth rate is probably illusory.
-- Long - term, the assertion that lower taxes creates higher GDP growth rates is certainly not proven.
Like other frontier markets, their economies offer strong GDP growth rates (averaging near 4 % in 2012) and generally low levels of debt & future entitlement spending, while their stock markets offer cheaper pricing & lower correlations vs. those of developed markets.
The site also includes 11 model portfolios — encompassing expected and historical returns and risk, tracking error, CAPE ratios, inflation expectations, yield curves, GDP growth rates, commodity term structures, and more.
In fact, the long - run expected increase in the real exchange rate between two countries can be approximated by the difference in productivity growth rates (estimated by real per capita GDP growth rates).
The Federal Reserve's (Fed) decision to delay raising interest rates in the wake of fears over the health of China's economy highlights the conundrum facing central bankers, so when will interest rates rise and will I be dead before rates match GDP growth rates («neutralise») again?
The 3 percent steady state growth rate is loosely based on GDP growth rates.
Thus, we see another headwind to GDP growth rates and bond yields.
There is no shortage of economists predicting China GDP growth rates for 2017 from a top - down perspective, but what about looking at matters from a bottom - up approach?
Generally, emerging markets continue to grow at above - trend global GDP growth rates, but the growth is much diminished from what it was forecast to be in coming years.
This is the next great challenge for Beijing, and when the regulators finally do start to repair overextended balance sheet, with a much higher debt - to - GDP ratio than any other country at China's stage of economic development, according to a presentation Monday night by my very smart former student, Chen Long, I expect annual GDP growth rates will continue dropping steadily, by 1 - 2 percentage points a year through the rest of this decade (and there has been increasing talk in the past month or two that GDP growth rates are already 1 - 2 points below the printed rates).
Banks can maintain high GDP growth rates to please local authorities and anger regulators by allowing credit to surge.
It is difficult to model the many ways credit intensivity of growth can change, but if we simply assume that there is no improvement except as growth slows, so that the ratio between credit growth and GDP growth stays constant, the table below shows debt levels at the end of ten years at different GDP growth rates:
Relaxing these limits is what allows them to achieve higher GDP growth rates than what underlying economic growth would dictate.
Banks can maintain high GDP growth rates to please local authorities but, while allowing credit to surge, they structure new credit in ways that disguise credit growth.
Given present conditions, the range of potential GDP growth rates over the coming 4 - 8 year period is much more constrained than investors may recognize.
They were simply a list of the various ways in which China could rebalance, and none of these various rebalancing paths included, for example, the possibility that China could maintain average GDP growth rates of 7 - 8 %, or even of 5 - 6 %, during President Xi's administration except under very specific, and unlikely, conditions.
Without a massive transfer of wealth from the state sector to the household sector it will be impossible, I would argue, for GDP growth rates of anything above 3 - 4 % — and perhaps even less — to occur without a further unsustainable increase in debt, whether that increase occurs inside or outside the formal banking system and whether or not discipline has been imposed on borrowers.
Their studies suggested that among developing countries nominal lending rates had on average been around two - thirds on nominal GDP growth rates (although China, at around one - third, was still well below anyone else's at the time).
Most importantly, with nominal GDP growth rates having dropped from 20 % to 8 - 9 % the greatest of all the distortions, the interest rate distortion, has been the one most dramatically to adjust in the past three years.
These GDP growth rates have historically been consistent with total returns of around 10 %... The main are of concern is earnings.
The metro area was one of just two among the 40 biggest with negative economic growth in 2016, with a GDP growth rate of -1.1 %.
Those measures were the unemployment rate, average weekly wage, job growth rate, GDP per capita, and GDP growth rate.
While Las Vegas» 2016 GDP growth rate of 3.9 % was the seventh - highest among the 40 largest metro areas, the region's Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 898 was the fifth - lowest.
The region's February 2018 unemployment rate of 3.0 % was tied for third - lowest, and its 2016 GDP growth rate of 4.9 % was the third - highest.
San Jose held the top position among the 40 largest metro areas in three of our five metrics: Its Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 2,297, 2016 GDP growth rate of 5.9 %, and 2016 GDP per capita of $ 126,820 were all best among the nation's big cities.
Atlanta's Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 1,067 was right in line with the average among the 40 largest metro areas of $ 1,095, and the region's 2016 GDP growth rate of 3.7 % was the eighth - highest.
Those measures included unemployment rate, average weekly wage, job growth rate, GDP per capita, and GDP growth rate.
Nashville's February 2018 unemployment rate of 2.7 % was the lowest among the 40 largest metro areas, and its 2016 GDP growth rate of 3.4 % was the ninth - highest.
Houston was one of just two of the 40 largest metro areas to experience a decrease in economic activity in 2016, with a GDP growth rate of -3.0 %, but its Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 1,187 was the seventh - best.
Although Tampa's 2016 GDP per capita of $ 46,972 was the second - lowest among the 40 largest metro areas, its GDP growth rate of 4.2 % that year was the fifth - highest.
San Francisco's Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 1,654, its February 2018 unemployment rate of 2.9 %, its 2016 GDP growth rate of 5.4 %, and its 2016 GDP per capita of $ 100,132 were all the second - best among the 40 largest metro areas.
Columbus» metro area February 2018 unemployment rate of 3.8 % was just below the average rate of 4.0 % among the 40 largest metro areas, and its 2016 GDP growth rate of 2.5 % was just above the average rate of 2.2 %.
Portland's 2016 GDP growth rate of 3.0 % was stronger than the average rate of 2.2 % among the 40 largest metro areas, and the region's February 2018 unemployment rate of 4.0 % was right in line with the average.
San Diego's February 2018 unemployment rate of 3.5 % was tied for 11th - lowest among the 40 largest metro areas, but its 2016 GDP growth rate of 0.3 % was the sixth - worst.
The metro area's 2016 GDP growth rate of 0.1 % was tied for third - lowest.
Despite the strong overall report card on the health of the economy, financial markets have weakened modestly in the wake of the GDP release, perhaps reflecting disappointment that the GDP growth rate was not even quicker.
Moreover, the post-recession GDP growth rate currently stands at 2.2 %, compared to a 4.4 % average for the previous seven recessions dating back to 1960.
China is the world's second - largest economy, and even with a GDP growth rate of 5 %, the growth rate is more than double that of developed economies,» said Ma.
«Globally,» says the IMF in its Global Financial Stability Report, «an increase in the forecast GDP growth rate leads to an increase in equity investments.
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