If the monetary authorities in China and India continue to hike interest rates at the pace they have set recently,
the next global recession may not be that far off.
Not exact matches
Next year is looking bleak for the economy, and many forecasters predict a deepening
global recession.
If the short run concern of those gathered in Davos is how the world will deal with the
next recession when it comes, the long run one has to be the declining appeal of democratic
global values.
In that context, it's far from obvious what economic levers governments have left to pull to fight the
next round of
recessions that are threatening the
global economy.
Over the
next century and a half the company underwent numerous changes and engaged in several alliances and partnerships While the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers did not cause the Great
Recession or even the subprime mortgage crisis, its downfall triggered a massive selloff in the
global markets.
I can't figure out the
next step, though — I'm guessing this simply forces the
global imbalances onto the commodity - exporting countries, which would presumably experience a temporary economic boom eve while the rest of the world enters
recession?
Pacific Investment Management Co., which runs the world's biggest bond fund, is forecasting that advanced economies will stall over the
next year as Europe slides into a
recession, underscoring mounting investor concern about the
global economic outlook.
A shift in monetary tightening has been identified in
global surveys as the most likely cause of the
next recession.
International investors expect the world economy to relapse into a
recession, with more than one in three forecasting a
global economic meltdown within the
next year.
Chancellor Alastair Darling was today forced to rein in his hopes for a
recession - beating «new
global deal»
next month, after Washington said it would not be negotiating a «specific commitment» at the G20 meeting.
Yesterday the OECD said that the UK would lag behind the rest of the world in recovering from the
global recession, however the IMF said it expected to see Britain experiencing growth
next year.
As credit requirements loosen, more people will want to buy, creating vacancies, said McCabe, adding that he expects another
global recession in the
next three years, which would depress rental rates.