Sentences with phrase «out of recession as»

His Left - wing rhetoric will alarm many Conservatives and business leaders, who point out that the Coalition is asking the private sector to take the lead in hauling the economy out of recession as the public sector is cut back.
He had made a deal to spend money to bail the US out of a recession as long as Congress agreed to cut spending back to normal levels as soon as the recession was over (Keynesian ideal).

Not exact matches

Casino operators agreed to raise wages during the last round of negotiations in 2013 as the city was coming out of the recession.
This spring, as the tech industry is soaring out of the Great Recession, plans are in the works for a flurry of massive, perk - laden headquarters.
They watched as their parents struggled through the recession due to decisions they made on the advice of many different kinds of financial professionals, and as a result, they tend to seek out alternative methods for managing their money.
Global demand has increased as economies in Europe and North America lift out of recession.
The president has been newly combative as he argues it's time to ease the harsh measures that were taken to help pull the economy out of recession.
Simply put, as part of a desperate attempt to keep America out of recession and himself out of the ranks of unemployed Americans, Obama has torn a page from the questionable Keynesian play book and just asked his political opponents for permission to toss the mother of all Hail Mary passes.
The trend has already taken a sizeable bite out of Canada's resource - heavy economy, possibly tipping it into recession during the first half of this year, and comes as Europe is still struggling with the fallout of the last crisis in Greece.
And as more Americans pull out of the recession, demand for professional financial advice is poised to increase.
Things start out looking pretty dire, as the economy fell into its deep recession through mid-2009, with the S&P 500 reaching a minimum in March of that year.
We came out of the Great Recession and I came out as a new person.
Figuring out ways to regulate trading by sophisticated investors in derivatives, which go by exotic names such as «currency forwards» and «credit default swaps,» is a hot topic in international policy circles, largely because failures on this murky side of the market are blamed for the 2008 global credit meltdown and the recession that followed.
A woman I work with borrowed against her 401k to buy a ski - in, ski - out condo for around $ 150k during the recession, which she now rents out on a daily basis for a crazy high return, as in her gross rents paid for the entire purchase price after 2 years of ownership, and she's now paid back her 401k loan.
Stimulus spending ensured that the downturn wasnâ $ ™ t as severe as it could have been and growth was stronger coming right out of the recession, but since then government austerity has slowed economic growth, putting us behind the even the 1990s recovery (see chart below).
«So long as the Fed is in an accommodative mode and the economy is out of recession, the odds are that you will have a bull market,» David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff and Associates, told the New York Times Tuesday.
As I've noted before, a recession is essentially a time when the mix of goods produced by the economy has become out of line with the mix of goods demanded.
Edwards added that he believes the recession is now here (hence his «ultimate» adjective), «just as it was in the fall of 2011 until global coordinated easing injected trillions and masked its impact, and will manifest itself unless the global central banks step up far more aggressively and tune out reality once again.»
The hearing has all but anointed Carney as Britain's New World saviour — the man who is tasked with hauling Britain out of its triple - dip recession, seeing it safely through the eurozone crisis and the worst economic downturn since the great depression.
Not only did he want continuity at the Fed, but the president said he needed Summers by his side in the White House as he tried to lift the economy out of a deep recession, according to people familiar with the conversation.
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 William Poole of the St. Louis Fed noted over the weekend, «It is too early to pick a precise date for the recession trough, but there is a bottoming out feel to the data.»
A future German inflation rate above the eurozone average could be part of a natural adjustment process as crisis - hit countries pulled themselves out of recession, the Bundesbank argued in evidence to German parliamentarians submitted on Wednesday.
The recession, in forcing many companies to re-evaluate their business premises, brought the benefits of serviced office space to the attention of major organisations and, as officebroker's CEO Chris Meredith pointed out — «these organisations have identified that these benefits still remain now the country is coming out of recession
As usual, I don't place too much emphasis on this sort of forecast, but to the extent that I make any comments at all about the outlook for 2006, the bottom line is this: 1) we can't rule out modest potential for stock appreciation, which would require the maintenance or expansion of already high price / peak earnings multiples; 2) we also should recognize an uncomfortably large potential for market losses, particularly given that the current bull market has now outlived the median and average bull, yet at higher valuations than most bulls have achieved, a flat yield curve with rising interest rate pressures, an extended period of internal divergence as measured by breadth and other market action, and complacency at best and excessive bullishness at worst, as measured by various sentiment indicators; 3) there is a moderate but still not compelling risk of an oncoming recession, which would become more of a factor if we observe a substantial widening of credit spreads and weakness in the ISM Purchasing Managers Index in the months ahead, and; 4) there remains substantial potential for U.S. dollar weakness coupled with «unexpectedly» persistent inflation pressures, particularly if we do observe economic weaknesAs usual, I don't place too much emphasis on this sort of forecast, but to the extent that I make any comments at all about the outlook for 2006, the bottom line is this: 1) we can't rule out modest potential for stock appreciation, which would require the maintenance or expansion of already high price / peak earnings multiples; 2) we also should recognize an uncomfortably large potential for market losses, particularly given that the current bull market has now outlived the median and average bull, yet at higher valuations than most bulls have achieved, a flat yield curve with rising interest rate pressures, an extended period of internal divergence as measured by breadth and other market action, and complacency at best and excessive bullishness at worst, as measured by various sentiment indicators; 3) there is a moderate but still not compelling risk of an oncoming recession, which would become more of a factor if we observe a substantial widening of credit spreads and weakness in the ISM Purchasing Managers Index in the months ahead, and; 4) there remains substantial potential for U.S. dollar weakness coupled with «unexpectedly» persistent inflation pressures, particularly if we do observe economic weaknesas measured by breadth and other market action, and complacency at best and excessive bullishness at worst, as measured by various sentiment indicators; 3) there is a moderate but still not compelling risk of an oncoming recession, which would become more of a factor if we observe a substantial widening of credit spreads and weakness in the ISM Purchasing Managers Index in the months ahead, and; 4) there remains substantial potential for U.S. dollar weakness coupled with «unexpectedly» persistent inflation pressures, particularly if we do observe economic weaknesas measured by various sentiment indicators; 3) there is a moderate but still not compelling risk of an oncoming recession, which would become more of a factor if we observe a substantial widening of credit spreads and weakness in the ISM Purchasing Managers Index in the months ahead, and; 4) there remains substantial potential for U.S. dollar weakness coupled with «unexpectedly» persistent inflation pressures, particularly if we do observe economic weakness.
Concerns over trade imbalances, alleged trade - rule violations, subsidization and state - owned enterprises, metastasizing industrial policies, discriminatory treatment of non-Chinese companies, and other forms of trade and investment protectionism have preoccupied Washington for a decade — ever since the United States limped out of a debilitating recession to find that China had supplanted it as the world's largest manufacturer and had set its sights on leapfrogging the United States, at all costs, to the technological fore.
It would start out as a recession, but then quickly evolve into a depression because of the bursting of the real estate bubble as well as the Dow.
Rates could easily eclipse the lows we've experienced during this cycle as we try to make our way out of the next recession.
But this average is made up of a wide range in results, as stocks have actually risen during 4 out of the last 9 recessions.
And stocks were positive 6 out of the past 9 times in the year leading up to the start of a recession, dispelling the myth that the stock market always acts as a leading indicator of economic activity.
Although they're painful, recessions are needed to weed out the strong companies from the weak, as many companies go out of business during the downturns and new ones emerge.
As we have long expected, the economy is tracing out a trajectory typical of the weak recoveries that follow balance - sheet induced recessions and credit crises caused by highly excessive debt.
If things continue to improve and the US does come out of recession in the coming quarters, as growth returns to the world's largest econmy then with it will the demand for natural gas.
It is true that our economic growth rates following the 2007 - 2009 recession have not approached the levels seen coming out of previous recessions, and as we shift from highly accommodative monetary policy, even Fed officials have called for additional fiscal - policy support.
Coming out of the recession of the 1980's Canada's fiscal structure was such that it was referred to by the Wall Street Journal as «an honourary member of the third world».
So, none of Romneys OUTRIGHT LIES and deceptions are evil, but our OUTSTANDING President, who has pulled us out of the BUSH recession and who has not lied once and has withstood the bogus name - calling and bogus acccusations from uninformed fools such as yourself has «values of the devil»??? Is that because he tells the truth and happens to be black?
«We as a community are coming out of Katrina, Gustav, Ike, and the tidal wave of the recession,» Kelly explained at his office, a few blocks from the iconic Superdome.
Your message reads as if you were afraid somebody will have some fun or make some money, and this when the nation is coming out of a recession and anybody with any sense is cheered by the signs of consumer confidence!
Economists were also qoted as saying this may have contributed immensely to the quick turnaround of the national economy which wriggled itself out of recession much faster than the public had expected.
By June 2011, as the UK economy headed for recession, Balls had largely set aside the issue of Labour's economic legacy and was locked in battle with George Osborne over how to lift the economy out of a deepening slump.
That's why the «good news» that Britain is out of recession once again is nowhere near as good as Conservative and Liberal Democrats would like.
As we enter 2011 it is very clear that the US economy represents both the greatest potential for pulling the global economy out of recession and the greatest threat of plunging the global economy back into a ruinous double - dip recession.
«The DAIRY Act will give the New York dairy community the boost it needs to ride the Greek yogurt wave... After years of struggle caused by the recession, I want to make sure as much of that milk as possible comes from New York and that our state's dairy farmers don't miss out on this amazing opportunity to grow their businesses.»
«This project is timely as Nigeria makes her journey out of recession and the economy continues to show considerable progress.
The prime minister claimed he and Nick Clegg have led the way to get Britain out of recession, as he explained why the «good times are so long coming».
It leaves out the very substantial contribution that 2 - 2.5 % annual growth would make to cutting the deficit, and indeed imposes spending cuts of such a magnitude as would significantly ratchet down growth potential and risk a double - dip recession.
Indeed, the last time that so few of us highlighted crime as one of the key national issues, the country was just edging its way out of the last recession whilst the PM John Major was announcing plans to close coal mines and the Queen was about to famously surmise the year as Annus Horribilis.
In the area of economy, this is a government that came when oil prices crashed, but as a result of various economic measures taken by this government, we are out of recession.
And it's something Gov. Andrew Cuomo believes would be a disaster for the state, assuming billions of dollars in county Medicaid costs just as the state has pulled out of the recession and is trying to spend money on more education aid, free tuition at public colleges and upgrade aging water systems.
This is related to people feeling the pinch with the recession, or at least has been brought into the foreground with the recession, but is something that can certainly be built on (perhaps football is a good test case for notions of desert - as it certainly couldn't be said that people are simply out to give footballers a beating, as could perhaps be said with politicians and bankers).
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