Needless to say, nobody in Italy wants to consider the possibility of eventually going back to the lira instead of the euro, but my impression is that this could change as
a likely global recession unfolds.
Not exact matches
He believes it
likely means the Fed is less worried that the slowing
global economy and a weaker China is particular is
likely to drag the U.S. into a
recession.
But while 2016 is
likely to be another year of slow
global growth, I don't foresee a
global recession.
Just 13 % of
global fund managers polled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch in early April think a
recession is
likely in the near term.
In my view, while 2015 will
likely turn out to be an uninspiring year, with
global growth close to 3 percent, there are few signs of an imminent
recession.
A shift in monetary tightening has been identified in
global surveys as the most
likely cause of the next
recession.
I don't trust government - reported statistics, thus I'd watch numbers that the Chinese government is less
likely to fudge: electricity consumption, which was down during the
global recession, same - store sales of American fast food restaurants in China, tonnage of goods shipped through railroads, and, though they may lag, sales by American and European companies in China.
The
global recession has knocked those prices back down to reasonable levels, but a recent report by the National Research Council warns of
likely future fluctuations in the price and supply levels of platinum - group metals.
The current weakness in Europe, Japan and the US is thought
likely to prove a temporary consequence of
recession; utilities, cement companies and steelmakers are set to buy large amounts this year, although in the longer term developed countries are moving away from coal in a bid to curb
global carbon emissions.
Take that powder keg — it would be a unique convergence of forces even in good times — and drop in the lighted match of an unprecedented
global recession; the blast
likely will transform the landscape of the private bar.
«Despite the
global economic slowdown, the housing sector continues to recover and will
likely help the U.S. economy avoid a
recession.»