Even with wars and two recessions, we might have avoided today's
huge deficits if GDP growth hadn't fallen to this frustratingly low plateau.
Not exact matches
If a strong - enough economic recovery were to take hold, Europe could grow its way out of its
huge fiscal
deficits and save the monetary union from collapse.
At the same time, however, the enormous increase in government liabilities stemming from an ongoing budget
deficit and
huge financial rescue efforts is likely to result in normal
if not elevated levels of inflation as the economy recovers.
If you think the driving force behind the trade
deficit is the savings - investment gap it becomes very obvious that what has destroyed manufacturing jobs is the Republican tax cuts that shifted the saving - investment gap from a relatively minor item to a
huge problem.
If the US were to run a positive current account balance with all of the other 9 largest economies in the world, the chance of the US running large, persistent current account
deficits with the entire world would be tiny cuz that'd assume
huge surpluses by countries that account for ~ 1 / 3rd of world GDP.
a foreigners (Dutch) view; it would be seen as a big laugh but also a disgrace for America
if Romney was elected; the Republicans never brought anything good for the USA and the rest of the world; look what Bush did; a
huge deficit; a war with the wrong enemy and the Democrats had to clean up the mess again;
Louis van Gaal is under
huge pressure and
if they fail to overturn the 2 - 1
deficit in the Europa League tonight that will only increase.
«
If you take the Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU)[report], they said 2017 and onward is going to be a period of prosperity for Ghana and that is because of the foundation that we have laid, it's because of the work that we have done, we've eliminated a lot of the
deficits that were created by
huge subsidies on utility tariffs, we eliminated a lot of the subsidies that created
huge deficits on the cost of petroleum products, today as I speak, Tema Oil Refinery (TOR) is running, and producing petroleum products for Ghana, we have enough stock of LPG, our tanks and strategic reserves for petroleum products are all full, and, so, we have ships standing offshore Ghana with petroleum products, but there is no space to offload those products, and, so, we've done a good job in stabilising various sectors of the economy.
If the Republicans cap the state and local deduction too high, they will still blow a
huge hole in the
deficit.
If you want to stabilize the cash flow in New York from
huge deficits, you need to make a REGRESSIVE tax code, so that when the economy hits bad times, the number of taxpayers increase to compensate for the loss at the other end.
If you have a 2500 calorie daily maintenance level, and you want to drop 3 lbs of fat per week withe diet alone, you'd need a
huge daily
deficit of 1500 calories, which would equate to eating 1000 calories per day.
If you're creating a proper calorie
deficit through your diet and are sticking to an intensive weight training plan, there's really no need to perform
huge amounts of cardio to get the results you're after.
After all, what's the point in losing 20 lbs in 2 months
if you just gain it back anyways (and with a now sluggish metabolism from the
huge calorie
deficit)?
But ambiguous actions like «provide for effective teacher hiring and recruitment... and retention practices» leaves one wondering
if this is just a euphemism for salary and benefit increases (at the same time the district is offering every single parcel of «excess» property it owns for sale in an effort to balance it's
huge budget
deficit, really?).
Unless I get to tackle them one at a time with a car battery and some alligator clips... But what it does offer is: i) a (v meaningful) solution that's pretty quick & easy to implement, ii)
huge flexibility from a political and a financial management perspective, iii) interest savings, and even debt principal reductions, for most
if not all countries, and iv) best of all, a multi-year window to avoid default, implement
deficit reductions (faint hope) and / or ideally grow into an outstanding debt burden.
However, I'd be none too surprised
if any eventual distribution strategy / announcement is accompanied by some
huge pension
deficit concession to the unions (despite AERL's repeated denials of any legal liability).