Sentences with phrase «much growth there»

No matter how much growth there is, it is still a quiet and relaxing beach that calms and soothes the soul.
But now that the totals are pretty large, you won't actually see much growth there over a rolling 12 - month period.
«I was surprised by how much growth there has been in younger men,» says Dr. Welch.
This statistic measures how much growth there's been in a state's total economic activity, accounting for inflation.

Not exact matches

The thinking is that the industry will continue its current trajectory of steady growth, which means that as much as there are opportunities to launch new podcast programming companies, there is also tremendous opportunity for entrepreneurs looking to build businesses that would help the industry scale up its processes.
«I wouldn't worry so much about a slowdown in job growth as long as there are signs that there's a re-acceleration in broader economic activity,» Marple added.
Of course there is no right answer but it's a function of how much capital you have raised, your prospects for raising more capital in the future, your growth rate and your company's risk tolerance.
There is a much simpler and faster way for Japan to stimulate economic growth.
In that vein, Japan needs no reminding that there is a much simpler and faster way of stimulating economic growth and getting out of deflation.
For somebody who had never been to New Orleans, but moved there initially to teach and then a year later left the classroom to start a company, I've seen firsthand just how much the community has invested in bringing in and retaining young people who really want to contribute to rebranding the city, bringing it from, old oil and gas and just tourism really into the 21st century with lots of high - tech, high - growth businesses.
There's not really much evidence that speeds above 2 Mbps or so actually improve productivity or economic performance / growth.
Much like BeeLabs, with their focus on the mobile space, Dokkan Afkar is another example of the rapid growth of international e-commerce and proves that there is a market demand for creative, innovative products and services in every corner of the world.
It's also coming at a time when people are looking for more growth - oriented stocks, and there aren't many companies that have the potential to grow as much as Twitter does.
There is much China can do to let its people enjoy the fruits of growth and technological development, said Takehiko Nakao, president of the Asian Development Bank.
«With the unemployment rate at 4.7 %, wage growth clearly picking up, and financial conditions much easier, there is likely a limit to how long the Fed's pause can last,» Goldman Sachs economists Jan Hatzius and Zach Pandl wrote in a recent note to clients.
Fed officials have already warned that the economy doesn't need stimulus per se as much as it needs growth - enhancing structural reforms, so there is a risk is that it will tighten monetary policy aggressively if Trump loosens it aggressively.
It's a brave new world — and until economic growth recovers, there isn't much of a safety net.
«Automakers have invested so much to be so competitive and segment growth just isn't there.
«There wasn't much opportunity for growth [at the previous employer].
«I looked around, did some reading, and the men's accessories market seemed like the obvious place to invest because there has just been so much of growth,» says Barclay, joking, «I remember when if you wore a pink shirt, everyone assumed you were gay.»
They will do this at a time when the country and many of these places face very real economic and social challenges that will not change that much from Amazon's expansion, all on the hope for growth that is destined to happen somewhere, but probably not there.
And we estimate that that can cut as much as a-third off of the manufacturing cycle for us, so obviously an opportunity for upside growth there.
But mostly if you raise $ 15 — 20 million and so do 4 — 5 of your competitors there is that much more incentive for «bad behavior,» which is where the «winner - take - all» mentality forces growth over margins.
I have ignored reasons that might justify lower discount rates or higher GDP adjustments for China mainly because the purpose of this essay is to explain why the U.S. multiple is so much higher than China's, and of course these reasons exist, but I think whatever the correct ratio should be, there is no question that advanced economies always justify higher multiples than developing economies because they tend to be economically more diversified and politically more stable, and they usually have institutions, including clearer legal and regulatory frameworks, more sophisticated capital allocation processes, less rigid financial systems, and smaller state sectors (which make smooth adjustment, one of the most valuable and undervalued components of long - term growth, more likely).
There is, of course, a great deal of skepticism about the 7 % real GDP growth rate that China has reported, but we should remember that in the first quarter, nominal GDP growth was much lower, 5.8 %.
On the wage side, though there's always variance, most wage and compensation series have been stuck at around 2 % year - over-year growth (nominal) with some, but not much, evidence of acceleration in response to the tightening labor market.
As a general principle, it is easier for an economy to grow quickly when there is a large pool of unused resources to be re-employed, and in Australia's current position in the cycle, that source of growth is now much more limited.
«He's right that there are headwinds like slowing population growth but the tech revolution is still very much happening.»
RK: The reason this feels so much like a bubble is because there are so many companies out there who continue to invest in user growth who haven't proven unit economics or certainly haven't proven that they can build unit economics off of a contained infrastructure and ultimately be profitable.
«There's going to be a pretty decent period of sluggish growth without much inflation.
There are so many reasons why this is wrong (to list just the most obvious, poor countries have much lower debt thresholds than rich countries, Japanese debt can not possibly be dismissed as not being a problem, and because it is almost impossible to find an economist who understands the relationship between nominal interest rates and implicit amortization, Japanese government debt has probably only been manageable to date because GDP growth close to zero has permitted interest rates close to zero) and yet inane comparisons between China's debt burden and Japan's debt burden are made all the time.
In fact there probably hasn't been much growth in the former, whatever the reported GDP data tell us, and there has been a lot in the latter.
«There is not much the Federal Reserve can do about gas prices, at least not without derailing growth entirely, which is certainly not the right way to go,» Bernanke said.
However much time they have — and in my opinion they are unlikely to have much more than 2 - 3 years in which to get credit growth under control, but there is no science to this so I can not know for sure — as Beijing moves forward in its struggle to rebalance the Chinese economy, we should keep three things in mind:
And there is no evidence that the lower rate would spark enough economic growth to pay for itself, nor that it would spark much growth at all.
Once small businesses have access to the same interest rates as foreign banks to finance their own growth, there will be more incentive for investors to invest their money into domestic small businesses, and not as much incentive for them to invest in foreign banks.
For much of the past decade there has been a growing recognition that Chinese growth has been seriously unbalanced, as Premier Wen put it, and that at the heart of the imbalance has been the very low consumption share of GDP.
If the authorities are willing to engage in loss - making activities to achieve the GDP growth target, there are two relevant characteristics of an economy like China's that change the nature of the GDP measure: first, economic activity is much less affected by hard - budget constraints than it is in most other economies; and second, bad debt is much less likely to be written down.
There is, in other words, actually quite a lot that we know and understand about the model, even if many of us seem to have forgotten much of it — including its typical weaknesses, one of the most obvious of which is the tendency for over-investment in the late stages of the miracle - growth period leading to an unsustainable increase in debt.
If GDP growth levels come in much below 6 or 7 %, there is a chance that debt growth is not excessive.
The job growth is fake, there's been no wage growth since 1999, inflation numbers are false, government debt is too high, corporate profits are too low, corporate profits are unsustainably high, companies aren't reinvesting their profits, companies are buying back too much stock, the Federal Reserve is propping up the market, the Federal Reserve is keeping rates artificially low, and so on.
In 2005, when consumption hit the then - astonishing level of 40 % of GDP, there was a widespread conviction in policy - making circles that this was an unacceptably low level and that it left Chinese growth much too dependent on the trade surplus and on increases in domestic investment.
I am not fully confident of this number because there seem to be significant strains in the banking system, and without easy credit growth there can not be much investment growth.
There is a widespread feeling that shows up in most of the surveys of business people that «business is tough» and that there is not much growth arThere is a widespread feeling that shows up in most of the surveys of business people that «business is tough» and that there is not much growth arthere is not much growth around.
This is the next great challenge for Beijing, and when the regulators finally do start to repair overextended balance sheet, with a much higher debt - to - GDP ratio than any other country at China's stage of economic development, according to a presentation Monday night by my very smart former student, Chen Long, I expect annual GDP growth rates will continue dropping steadily, by 1 - 2 percentage points a year through the rest of this decade (and there has been increasing talk in the past month or two that GDP growth rates are already 1 - 2 points below the printed rates).
There is no way Beijing can address its debt problem without a sharp drop in GDP growth, but as unwilling as Beijing may be to see much lower growth, it doesn't have any other option.
And that non-resource export growth is much more a function of U.S. demand than it is the level of the currency to begin with, so I'm doubtful there's a huge incremental positive boost related to the terms of trade and concurrent exchange rate decline.
If you are eager to buy a franchise and have dreams of expanding and owning multiple establishments, it is important to find out how much room there is for growth from the franchise company, if there are plans for expansion into new territories, and how long it takes a franchisor to get to the point where opening another franchise becomes a viable option.
With a payout ratio at only 31 %, there's plenty of room for much more dividend growth from the perspective of payout ratio expansion, and that's before factoring in business growth (which is phenomenal, as we'll see shortly).
And there's less growth potential in the mobile communication space moving forward, due to so much saturation in the US mobile market.
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