Sentences with phrase «economic predicaments»

He said media should endeavour in sensitizing public on the current economic predicaments through educative and informative programmes capable of orientating the general public on the need to be productive and take - off their minds from crude oil revenues that have crashed.
«Canada's Economic Predicament,» C.D. Howe Institute Commentary 1, by Carl E. Beigie and Wendy Dobson (July).
The depression itself had disastrous consequences elsewhere, especially in Europe, and in Germany the economic predicament and the resulting social malaise contributed to the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich.
Labour needs to have a frank exchange with voters about fiscal responsibility and the scale of the economic predicament the whole of Europe is now in The authors of the pamphlet, «In the Black Labour», are to be congratulated.
Labour needs to have a frank exchange with voters about fiscal responsibility and the scale of the economic predicament the whole of Europe is now in.
Those who prefer Britain's religious leaders to keep out of politics will be frustrated - but the wide - ranging problems which contributed to our current economic predicament are justification enough for the Church's intervention.
According to him, despite his general knowledge of the country's economic predicament prior to becoming president, he was still taken aback by the severity of existing challenges.
Adagunodo stressed that the Governor was being hypocritical, adding that while he was urging civil servants in the state to endure with the acclaimed economic predicament and cope with half salaries, «he was busy throwing around billions of naira in the guise of overhead personnel cost ``.
Having arrived at the age where I need (but given the economic predicament can not draw on) my retirement savings, my question is not so much how can we hedge against inflation but how can we protect ourselves against out - and - out economic catastrophe.

Not exact matches

As the end of the year approaches, and the bad economic news shows no signs of slowing, many business owners find themselves in a similar predicament.
I still believe, as I put it in chapter two, that «software», not «hardware» — the long, slow waves of cultural change, not the more obvious technological and economic changes that figure so prominently in public debate and academic social science — hold the key to the British predicament; that our ills form an interdependent system or, in medical language, a «syndrome»; and that they reflect the bewilderment and disorientation of a people who have forgotten the history that shaped them, and who therefore no longer know who they are.
The predicament of de-unionised labour, of those who live in conditions of economic dependence, of those in particular who live in dependence on violent partners, and of entire citizen - bodies whose representative assemblies have lost power to executives — all these would appear to a neo-Roman theorist to be examples of being made to live like slaves.
As a historian I am only too aware that during times of economic crisis people, scared about their precarious situation, are happy to be given a scapegoat for their predicament.
If per human overconsumption of scarce resources; unbridled economic globalization overspreading the surface of our planetary home; and the skyrocketing increase of absolute global human population numbers could be occurring synergistically in our time and could have something to do with the distinctly human - driven predicament which looms ominously before humanity, does it make sense to consider, just for a moment, what might to done to set limits on these overgrown human activities?
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