A new study projects
continued slow population growth for Massachusetts for the next 20 years.
Not exact matches
Most economists expect potential economic
growth to decline from about 3 per cent annually to about 2 per cent over the next ten years, as a result of
continued poor productivity
growth and a
slowing labour force
growth as the
population ages.
Although
population growth in some places is
slowing down, worldwide, it
continues unabated.
The MIT projection is that if we
continue on our way as at present, shortages of resources for industry will
slow population growth within twenty years and stop it, early in the twenty - first century, at approximately six billion.
So, if the market sentiment decides it doesn't like a few factors, such as a decision to follow a divergent monetary policy,
continued slow global economic
growth, a world - wide aging
population, and the swearing in of Donald Trump as the next American President, we could be see a rise in bond rates, which will absolutely start to increase fixed - rate mortgage rates.
So, we expect based on our finding that
continued development will reduce fertility rates in all but the most advanced countries, and that development will thus
slow the rates of global
population growth.
If human produced CO2 grew by X % during a period of
population growth of Y %, it is not logical to assume that it will
continue to grow at X % when
population growth slows down to Y / 3 %, is it?
It is very unlikely that human CO2 that has been observed to increase at X % per year while human
population increased at Y % per year will
continue to increase at X % per year when
population growth slows to Y / 3 % per year.
Let's take a «middle of the pack» IPCC SRES model - based «scenario and storyline» representing «business as usual» with very rapid economic
growth, human
population continuing to grow but at a
slower rate, leveling off at a
population of around 10.5 billion by the end of the century and no «climate initiatives»
Yes, the country's phenomenal
growth of the previous two decades has
slowed, but this point was inevitable; the economy, once it had reached such a size and its working age
population had peaked, as it did in 2012,
growth couldn't
continue at the same pace.
«Immigration has been the dominant source of household formation since the early 1990s, a trend that will accelerate over the coming decade as the rate of natural
population growth continues to
slow.»
Multifamily development is not
slowing down across the metro, as
population growth and a thriving job market
continue to fuel apartment demand.