Sentences with phrase «current economic approach»

Not exact matches

The current U.S. economic expansion is now approaching nine years and is the third longest in duration since 1945, according to the National Bureau of Economic Reconomic expansion is now approaching nine years and is the third longest in duration since 1945, according to the National Bureau of Economic REconomic Research.
Investors looking for value need to take a holistic approach that measures a company's ability to deliver economic earnings to investors and quantifies the expectations for future cash flows embedded in its current stock price.
Jean Boivin, head of economic and markets research for the BlackRock Investment Institute, explains the limits of the current monetary policy regime and why a new approach is needed.
We are approaching the fourth year of the current economic expansion and there remains a meaningful amount of doubt and lack of confidence.
He's also a vocal critic of Cuomo's approach to upstate economic development, saying he'd favor across - the - board tax cuts and regulatory changes instead of the targeted tax breaks and subsidies offered by the current administration.
It appears that this has led certain political groups to consider that anything that involves economic interventionism is just another communism or socialism despite France using the dirigiste approach until the 1980s and various historical or current examples of state capitalism.
But lurking quietly in the small print there will also be some hard facts about Britain's economic decline, about the failure of our current finance - and public sector - led approach to jobs, about the politically inspired fantasy forecasting from the Treasury in its pre-budget report just six months ago.
British Chancellor George Osborne has said he will stick to his current economic plan despite calls from the IMF to rethink his austerity - led approach.
Participants heard plenary framing presentations on five topics including the Governor's recent regional economic development initiative and experience with it to date, past and current efforts to do regional planning in the Hudson Valley and regional approaches to business and tourism.
That the Parliament recognises that contract research staff in Scotland's universities and research institutes are one of the most significant assets in Scotland's knowledge economy; notes that more than 90 % of such staff are employed on insecure fixed term contracts, resulting in a systematic failure to properly exploit our science and social science base to the benefit of the Scottish economy and society; further notes that this highly educated human resource, comprising graduate, postgraduate and postdoctoral level workers, is subject to constant wastage, to the detriment of Scotland's universities and economic potential; and believes that the Scottish Executive should act with clarity, urgency and determination to secure a complete overhaul of the management of the contract research workforce with a view to eliminating the current insecurity and wastage and establishing a radical new approach in partnership with higher education employers and representatives of the research staff.
Using a multidisciplinary approach, panelists will examine economic, environmental, political and historical issues in addition to those of health and medicine to draw lessons from the current outbreak and devise methods to prevent modern plagues going forward.
Unfortunately, retailers who take this approach will face an uphill battle on two fronts in the current economic climate.
So there we were, Christmas approaching, and in spite of us both feeling a wee bit gloomy about our current economic statuses, we were cheerily sitting in the local pub one evening, with Thomas telling me all these wonderful stories about the people and experiences of working on Savile Row.
We are working on a twofold approach: The first explores change itself as a current paradigm for it relates to social, economic and cultural change.
At its current scale and rate of growth, the continuous economic expansion we see today may be approaching a point in human history when unbridled increases of production, unchecked per human consumption and skyrocketing human population numbers could overrun the limited natural resources and frangible ecosystem services upon which life as we know it utterly itself depends for its very existence.
The great risk is that although the current approach to climate taken by the Trump EPA may slow the alarmist agenda as long as it remains in office, no real changes will be made to the EF, and future administrations may simply resume and even the Obama Administration's alarmist agenda at the expense of the future of US economic well being.
It may well be that on balance adaption to whatever comes our way is the most prudent and balanced approach, with a measure of circumspection surrounding our current economic activities.
Under the current approach these would lock economies and the planet into a costly high carbon future and undermine a green new deal that could pave the way out of economic recession.
What is lacking is «easy» solution which would allow the use of the precautionary principle (without easy solution, precautionary principle is a terrible trap), so imho the logical conclusion is no - regret policies and further study — certainly not guilt - relieving policies and economic redistribution, which seems to be the current approach...
Consumption patterns and associated per capita shares of resource use and pollution differ enormously, and using a consumption - based calculation rather than a national territorial production - based approach demonstrates even further the extent of global economic and environmental inequality: about 50 % of the world's people live on less than $ 3 per day, 75 % on less than $ 8.50, and 90 % on less than $ 23 (US$ at current purchasing power parity).
According to an industry expert, the higher request rate is due to changing requirements for life insurance protection for the baby boomer generation approaching retirement, and the current economic climate that is forcing many families to live on tighter budgets.
While I congratulate the Government for its goal of promoting home ownership and improving economic opportunities for remote Indigenous Australians, research suggests that the current approach will only be successful in a small number of Indigenous communities.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z