Sentences with phrase «out of the global recession»

Prime Minister Stephen Harper unveiled a budget yesterday aimed at pulling the country out of the global recession.

Not exact matches

In the period leading up to the 2008 global recession, KingFisher established a war chest that allowed it not only to ride out the downturn but also finance its subsequent purchase of two Washington - based manufacturers: Renaissance Marine Group and Hells Canyon Marine (KingFisher also employs approximately 200 people at its U.S. facility).
Global demand has increased as economies in Europe and North America lift out of recession.
If the most recent batch of confidence surveys are any indication, consumers have just figured out the global economy may be headed for recession.
It is hard to imagine Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty actually coming out and stating that he thinks the risk of another global recession is growing daily.
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.
At the same time, some two out of three asset managers reckon a Chinese recession is the number one «tail risk» to global markets.
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.»
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.
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.
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?
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.
Analysts fear that in the wake of the global recession, countries are reluctant to take the necessary action to achieve the ambitious goals set out a decade ago.
Aston writes that due to the global financial recession beginning in 2007 they were not able to fund development of the standard some models, and that the two models in question (DB9 and Vantage) were originally intended to be phased out before the new regime.
These are the Social Darwinists (sometimes called Social Positivists) whose thinking stood behind the great economic expansion, was challenged by a global recession, and ultimately fell out of favor in the United States when the princely...
He raised taxes at a time when the average family was near or in starvation mode, he confiscated all of the nation's privately - owned gold and then promptly devalued the dollar by 40 % (reducing the buying power of any saved dollars by almost half overnight), he raised bank reserve requirements numerous times (taking yet more cash out of the real economy so it could be hoarded in vaults), he actively supported a trade war with tariffs that created massive global imbalances (some would argue ushering in the rise to power of fascist regimes that would have had no chance in times of prosperity), and perhaps most damning, rather than plowing most of those raised tax dollars back into the stalled economy, he instead bought gold on the global markets for the government and sequestered it, keeping it from backing new dollars (monetary expansion, which most understand is required to turn a recession around) and instead further crushing the economy — and not just the US economy.
These are the Social Darwinists (sometimes called Social Positivists) whose thinking stood behind the great economic expansion, was challenged by a global recession, and ultimately fell out of favor in the United States when the princely accumulation of wealth and power by a generation of Robber Barons was recognized as jarringly undemocratic.
Global growth coming out of the Great Recession has been lacklustre.
But that time, everyone was freaking out — the mortgage market was collapsing, everyone is saying the world was gonna go into a global economic recession, the stock market tanked, and I don't know if the post is still there, I've deleted a lot of old posts that aren't as good as the ones today, but I actually said when the stock market's down like now and everyone's freaking out, this is the best time to buy stocks.
The BoC's decision has been the subject of much debate — recent low interest rates were intended as an economic stimulus coming out of last year's recession, and some economists have been arguing that rates should stay low for the time being as a measure of protection against global market turmoil.
Many of those who have moved to the town from Israel, North and South America and Europe are idealists; people disenchanted with the career - climbing lifestyle or shut out of opportunities at home by the global recession.
«We're eight years out of the great recession, and now that unemployment rates are down, companies are hiring and the gig and contingent workforce is becoming more prevalent,» said Mary O'Loughlin, vice president of global customer experience at HireRight, a background screening provider based in Irvine, Calif. «As freelance job opportunities continue evolving, it will become much more acceptable, and the standard, for employers to screen gig and contingent workers.»
«When first - time buyers stepped out of the market in the fourth quarter of 2008, at the height of the global recession, their absence was profoundly felt,» says Phil Soper, president and chief executive of Royal LePage.
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