«He's right that there are headwinds
like slowing population growth but the tech revolution is still very much happening.»
Not exact matches
Before Hinchey's retirement announcement, it looked
like two freshmen Central New York Republicans — Ann Marie Buerkle and Richard Hanna — would likely end up in a primary battle when state lawmakers finished redrawing the House lines and removing two seats — a move made necessary by New York's
slow population growth as compared to other states.
Fortunately,
population growth in the world appears to be
slowing faster than anyone forecasted, largely through voluntarily measures (with the exception of a few states
like China), while simultaneously improving human welfare around the world.
So, if the market sentiment decides it doesn't
like a few factors, such as a decision to follow a divergent monetary policy, continued
slow global economic
growth, a world - wide aging
population, and the swearing in of Donald Trump as the next American President, we could be see a rise in bond rates, which will absolutely start to increase fixed - rate mortgage rates.
Like many Western economies, German
population growth's
slowed markedly in recent years & decades.
I recently learned of the phrase «
slow changing stocks» — things
like infrastructure and
population growth which start out small, maybe a new power plant here or an oversized family there — but determine how we use resources far into the future.
But I personally think such a future would diminish us all, so I would
like to see more people listen to Steve Salmony, Jack Alpert, and other voices in favor of
slowing human
population growth now in a humane way.
Leading emerging economies
like India and China say access to cheaper clean energy technologies is essential if they are to
slow emissions
growth and allow their growing
populations access to power.
Fortunately,
population growth in the world appears to be
slowing faster than anyone forecasted, largely through voluntarily measures (with the exception of a few states
like China), while simultaneously improving human welfare around the world.
They say the technological fixes also distract from more challenging social reforms
like slowing the rate of
population growth, shifting away from crops
like corn ethanol that don't put food on the table, or ending subsidies for livestock production, which currently eats up an appalling 75 percent of the world's agricultural land.