Sentences with phrase «deep slump»

The phrase "deep slump" refers to a severe and long-lasting economic decline or downturn. It means that the economy is doing very poorly, with high levels of unemployment, low production, and widespread financial struggles. Full definition
Since 2011 commodity prices in general have gone into a deep slump, with last year's oil crash crippling the energy sector.
This effort significantly boosted overall GDP growth and «pushed the Chinese economy out of a deep slump,» says research firm BCA Research.
Recessions spawn economic nationalism, protectionism, and the deeper the slump, the stronger are those tendencies.
Food was, and of course still is, one of my biggest sources of nourishment, but I have to say it wasn't a kale smoothie or a magical superfood that got me out of that deep slump.
Though sports car sales have been in a deep slump for years, the world's automakers are embracing the horsepower - and - testosterone market once again.
Would you be okay if stocks entered a deep slump with your money invested as it is today?
In that case, we could expect a deeper slump in house prices.
As we have seen over the past decade, stock prices do sometimes reach a market peak or «top,» then go into a deep slump that lasts a year or two — sometimes even longer.
If they run into a business setback, small - cap stocks often go into a deep slump.
But the predictions of Brexit ushering in a deep slump proved wrong, and within weeks the stock market had not only recovered its post-Brexit loss but was up 7 % from the end of the previous year.
If, for example, the financial markets go into a deep slump or your nest egg's value takes a hit because you make an unusually large withdrawal to handle a large unanticipated expense, you might need to forgo an inflation increase or even reduce the amount you withdraw for a few years to give your portfolio a chance to recover.
A protracted war could sap consumer confidence, plunge the country into recession, and push the commercial property market into a deeper slump, warns Stuart Gabriel, Ph.D., director of the Lusk Center for Real Estate at the University of Southern California.
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