Sentences with phrase «known as the recession»

Every few years, countries experience an economic downturns, also known as a recession.
Stage 2: Periodontitis During this stage, the gums begin to pull away from the teeth, known as recession.
(TNS)-- With record student loan balances and rampant underemployment among their ranks, millennials have become widely known as the recession generation.

Not exact matches

The September 1 Gross Domestic Product release will be the one that will let us know whether or not we are in a recession, at least by the semi-official definition of «a period of at least two consecutive quarters of negative growth in real gross domestic product for Canada, as reported by Statistics Canada under the Statistics Act.»
Some predict a recession due to the changes proposed, while others declare the end of entrepreneurship as we know it.
Since then, longer rates have come closer to being overtaken by short rates, a phenomenon known as yield curve inversion, which has been a reliable precursor of past recessions.
Nevertheless, he has also opposed its policies since the Great Recession, including the monetary policy known as quantitative easing.
It strikes me as at least possible that businesses launched during recessions are of a different nature than those launched otherwise, in that the entrepreneur presumably launched a business knowing it was during a recession.
The worldwide nominal value — also known as the notional or «face» value — of derivatives tripled in the five years leading up to the recession, at which time it was around $ 600 trillion, according to the Bank for International Settlements.
No, you should have * three * recessionary concerns: If / When the next recession hits, it will be painfully obvious that the Fed's forecasts were wrong and it has spent too much time peevishly focused on non-existent inflation, treating the 2 % «target» as a ceiling.
On the prospect of recession, I'm reasonably well - known as one of the only economists who correctly warned in real - time of oncoming recessions in October 2000 and again in November 2007 — both points where the consensus of economic forecasters indicated no expectation of oncoming trouble at all.
As Canadians are becoming all too aware, the spectre of a recession, no matter the definition, looms large during an election campaign.
The meltdown of global credit markets starting with American sub-prime mortgage loans, leading to the death of Wall Street as we have known it, and now to a serious global recession, seemingly came out of nowhere.
As many investors know, although an extreme lack of growth is generally associated with weak markets, outside of recessions there is a very weak relationship between stock market performance and economic growth.
The U.S. government began to tighten monetary policy years prior to the recession in 1958, also known as the Eisenhower Recession, in an effort to curb inflation; however, prices continued to climb and the strengthening U.S. dollar led to a growing foreign traderecession in 1958, also known as the Eisenhower Recession, in an effort to curb inflation; however, prices continued to climb and the strengthening U.S. dollar led to a growing foreign tradeRecession, in an effort to curb inflation; however, prices continued to climb and the strengthening U.S. dollar led to a growing foreign trade deficit.
Economic contraction in the U.S. and Europe in the early and mid 1970s did not lead immediately to economic contraction in what were then known as LDCs, largely because the massive recycling of petrodollar surpluses into the developing world fueled an investment boom (and also fueled talk about how for the first time in history the LDCs were immune from rich - country recessions).
Awash in Liquidity The second round of quantitative easing, known as QE2, follows the Fed's purchases of nearly $ 2 trillion of bonds during the Great Recession.
The resulting new market structure, including a troublesome feature known as the ETF / underlying security liquidity mismatch, have yet to be truly tested by a bear market, recession or higher levels of volatility.
It's known as a yield curve inversion and typically a sign of a coming recession.
As we know, the materialisation of some of the risks that had built up in the financial system, followed by a financial crisis, deep recessions and slow recoveries, has meant that much more has been demanded of central banks in recent years, especially those in the major jurisdictions.
Whereas Austrian economists believe that government interventions cause the periods of economic boom and bust known as business cycles, Keynesian economists believe that recessions and depressions are unavoidable and that an activist central bank can mitigate fluctuations in the business cycle.
As we all know, 2008 was the start of the Great Recession and a brutal year in the stock market.
The mechanisms of this international capitalist recession, the latest of which, to date, some would like to see as the first crisis of world capitalism, are well known: contraction in production and trade; deflationary trends; massive growth in the volume of loans accumulated by international banks on countries or on the major industrial and banking groups, loans which become transformed into irrecoverable debts; brutal capital withdrawals from countries by the major financial operators, which live from the revenue from parasitical investments in bonds, shares and other derivatives.
We now know Bush's God was really Satan as we saw 8 years of crime, two Wars, Recession and War Crimes.
«Being in the fresh produce business, we knew as we were going into the recession that people have to eat,» she points out.
During one of the worse recessions we've known, as well as during times of warfare, it is quite conceivable that many single parents might consider enlisting in the US Armed Forces.
We know that our economy in Osun today suffers a huge dose of stagnation as a result of the recession that has bedeviled the nation called Nigeria.
Given the negative and selfish rhetoric we've heard from the leaders of the various public employee unions this year when Governor Paterson has asked them to share in the general belt - tightening that so many New Yorkers have been enduring as the result of the Great Recession, one might assume that if taxpayers knew that their gift was paying the salaries of state workers, they would not be so benevolently disposed toward our program.
«Unless we apply the break and uphold the rule of law and democratic conventions and practices in all ramifications, our greatest losses, moving forward, will not be economic recession, lack of critical infrastructure, among others, but an irredeemably deteriorated civilian rule where the decisions of the courts, letters and spirit of the law, resolutions of the legislature, electoral choices of Nigerians as expressed through the ballot no longer count.»
He added that «everyone» knew that sharing the proceeds of growth would not work as an economic pledge during a recession.
The first is how much ground the economy has to make up to return to its long - term trend — known as the output gap — and the second is the damage caused to the economy by the recession.
As many countries are not only in recession, but also increasing the proportion of elderly people in the population, the authors wanted to know what impact this might have on life expectancy.
His extraordinary list of interview subjects includes: President George Bush; two unprecedented interviews with Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke, during the recent economic upheaval known as the Great Recession.
But The Gifted supplies some additional reasons anyway, with customary vagueness about how it fits into a greater continuity: The X-Men as the public knows them have «disappeared,» and it's (intentionally) difficult to tell whether this is an early step in the process that leads to the mutant - light world of Logan, the mutant - annihilating alternate timeline of Days Of Future Past, or just a contemporary version of the periodic X-Men recessions that seem to plague the earlier incarnations of the team (Days Of Future Past and Apocalypse have both Xavier's school and his injustice - fighting squadron expanding and receding as needed — part of that infinite - origins deal the X-Men movies traffic in).
These coveted awards, known as i3 grants, were created in response to the recession of 2009 in an effort to help supplement school spending and to fund experiments that aimed to improve the achievements of disadvantaged students.
«For years, the teaching profession could count on discrimination, depression, and recession to act as its recruiting agent but no longer.
No matter how you slice it, public school resources have been reduced in recent years, even if you accept the depths of a recession as a valid point of comparison.
As in all good books, I learned a lot of things I didn't know before, like the invention of one of the carnival attractions we all take for granted, the economic depression (recession?)
Since manga sales aren't as high as they used to be — a statement true of most industries, especially entertainment ones, in a recession that has yet to let go its hold — manga industry companies can no longer afford to turn a blind eye:
Economically speaking, if short - term rates rise above long - term rates — a process known as «inversion» — it's often a warning sign of a coming recession.
But that time, everyone was freaking out — the mortgage market was collapsing, everyone is saying the world was gonna go into a global economic recession, the stock market tanked, and I don't know if the post is still there, I've deleted a lot of old posts that aren't as good as the ones today, but I actually said when the stock market's down like now and everyone's freaking out, this is the best time to buy stocks.
Neoclassical economists, who have dominated the Fed for over 40 years, drove us into a huge inflation, which Volcker choked, and then Greenspan & Bernanke drove us into a liquidity trap by refusing to let recessions eliminate bad debt, creating the «great moderation,» which is now known as a sham.
No doubt, the slope of the yield curve, as measured by the spread between two - and 10 - year government bonds, has been flattening since 2014 in both Canada and the United States, and the trend has recently intensified: as we headed into December, the curve sat at its flattest level since the Great Recession.
This idea has taken hold because there was a lot of fear mongering that took place when the markets tanked in 2008 (followed by what was known as the «worst recession since the Great Depression»).
The article will cover six high profile and well - known industrial companies that have outperformed the S&P 500 as our economy has come out of the recession of 2008 and 2009.
Recession to inflation, the mortgage market has largely been affected by the six major banks in Canada, which are known as the «big six».
As we know, though, the stock market also tends be a leading indicator of oncoming recessions.
As we all know, mortgage securitization played a critical role in the 2008 recession.
All of these factors combined to create the phenomenon we know as the Great Recession.
As in humans, the presence of bacteria causes bad breath (bacteria stinks), and the accumulation of tartar causes irritation and inflammation to the gums around the dog's teeth (gingivitis, under the form of red, swollen gums), which in turn may lead to periodontal disease (the loss of the connective tissue fibers, ligaments and bone surrounding the teeth and responsible for supporting them) and eventually tooth loss due to gradual loss of supporting structure — see photo, something known as gingival recessioAs in humans, the presence of bacteria causes bad breath (bacteria stinks), and the accumulation of tartar causes irritation and inflammation to the gums around the dog's teeth (gingivitis, under the form of red, swollen gums), which in turn may lead to periodontal disease (the loss of the connective tissue fibers, ligaments and bone surrounding the teeth and responsible for supporting them) and eventually tooth loss due to gradual loss of supporting structure — see photo, something known as gingival recessioas gingival recession.
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