Sentences with phrase «huge economic problem»

You can understand why many see student debt as a huge economic problem the economy is facing in the coming years.
Based on what they're saying, you'd have to conclude that they believe that Nafta and other trade agreements have caused Ohio's huge economic problems.
Most of Western Europe except Germany, are having huge economic problems which has led to lower sales an profits in those areas
On holiday in Canada (Toronto and the lakes, if you're interested), where the news is dominated not by Libya, Hurricane Irene or their next - door - neighbour's huge economic problems, but by the death of a politician many in Britain have probably never heard of — Jack Layton.

Not exact matches

Rhoades identified the issue as «huge mistrust» for Wall Street: ``... The problem is, if we don't have trust in our system, we don't have [individual investors] participate in our capital markets... and that will result in reduced economic growth in our country.»
(June 22, 2017, Albany) A coalition of prominent government watchdog groups say Governor Cuomo, Senate Leader Flanagan and Speaker Heastie have completely failed to address the huge problems revealed by last year's alleged rigging of $ 800m in state economic development contracts and that... (read more)
(June 22, 2017, Albany) A coalition of prominent government watchdog groups say Governor Cuomo, Senate Leader Flanagan and Speaker Heastie have completely failed to address the huge problems revealed by last year's alleged rigging of $ 800m in state economic development contracts and that billions of state funds remain at risk for bid rigging and pay to play.
Whoever's in charge come May 8th, unless they put climate change at the heart of their programme for office the UK will be building up huge economic and ecological problems for the future.
To repeat, this is not primarily a technological or even an economic problem, as huge as these challenges are.
With the huge rise in unemployment, unmanageable debt, economic problems, and uncertainty in the marketplace, many fly - by - night companies have sprouted up offering debt settlement to consumers that are not legitimate; in fact many are nothing more than scams.
Snerdaperds: «Neon Brood is just another example of the huge dumpster fire that is Steam, produced by a guy who just reskinned doom, slapping a new paintjob over the top of it, selling the game again and again on Steam... Steam can't be bothered to fix this problem because there's no economic benefit to them stepping away from that hundred dollars per game being published, and as long as these devs make more money than it cost for them to put the game on Steam, they're gonna keep doing it.»
But of course the real economic problem facing us is the coming meltdown of the banking industry due to their huge exposure to bad loans.
You may not agree with everything in the book — FWIW I think he may have underestimated the potential of fast fission — but this doesn't detract from the essential message, namely that we face huge but not necessarily insurmountable problems and that simplistic solutions which ignore scaling and economic realities are unhelpful.
Relating to the Wicked Problem issue only minimally raised and discussed so far, it bears pointing out that the US and other countries already have huge economic incentives to research, develop, and install new energy production.
I think when great huge chunks of ice start sliding off the Greenland plateau into the sea and nations start to realise that all the Greenland ice will be gone by 2070 and the sea level will rise by 7 metres by the same date then they will realise this problem can't be tackled by playing economic games with cap and trade.
Every huge economic sector that must be disrupted is another social and political problem.
Australia still produces more than 80 % of its electricity from coal, and its economy depends significantly on coal exports, which is a huge problem in a new green economic era.
Commonly referred to as «NEETs», this huge section of society aged 16 - 24 (the Scottish government limits its NEET classification to those aged 16 - 19) is a desperate social and economic problem.
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