Sentences with phrase «derail the recovery in»

Not exact matches

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin may visit China, in a move that could help defuse rising trade tensions between the world's two largest economies that threaten to derail a global economic recovery.
MOSCOW (Reuters)- An escalation in U.S. sanctions against Moscow risks derailing a fragile recovery in Russia's economy, which had just begun to take hold after the Kremlin's last confrontation with the West in 2014, analysts and investors said on Monday.
The current US recovery, which is now tied for the third - longest on record, has also been the weakest economic expansion since World War II, with an average annual growth rate of just 2 % over an 8 - year period.5 It may not take much to derail such tepid growth, particularly in light of continued high expectations.
A full - on globalization backlash could undermine hopes for shifting away from secular stagnation by derailing the nascent recovery in investment spending and productivity growth in the U.S. Global trade tends to boost productivity through fostering of competitive pressures, product specialization, scale economies, global value chains and technology transfer.
During resumed debate on the budget in the Commons, Cable was asked by Labour MP Phil Wilson what the government would do if the «massive gamble» for the country failed and derailed the recovery.
The movie derails in the final stretch as Bad embarks on the road to recovery; it's a bit too fast and neat and more than a little proud of itself.
The current US recovery, which is now tied for the third - longest on record, has also been the weakest economic expansion since World War II, with an average annual growth rate of just 2 % over an 8 - year period.5 It may not take much to derail such tepid growth, particularly in light of continued high expectations.
The two were aboard the Amtrak train that derailed in Philadelphia in May, and the gala celebrated their recovery as much as it did any artist's work.
Insurance companies acting in bad faith can easily derail the recovery process and put extra strain on victims and their families.
Sure, everyone here in Los Angeles says they're positive about the near term; yet every pronouncement of optimism comes with a but: Hotel fundamentals look good, but macroeconomics could derail recovery.
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