It's expensive to live in the mountains, and many agents coming
out of the recession thought it would be easy to sell up here.
Not exact matches
Lane's comments this week leave little doubt that the central bank
thinks it could use some help keeping Canada's economy
out of 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.
It seems to imply that if I have a good idea and it is well
thought out, etc., it is equally OK to launch it during a
recession or during periods
of growth.
We
think by the end
of this year Europe will come
out of recession.
While I'm not persuaded by the argument that Canada needs countercyclical Keynesian deficit spending (I
think we're already
out of recession), I do know what fiscal policy I would consider worse: arbitrarily cutting spending in a weak economy to balance the budget in light
of a revenue shortfall stemming from lower than expected nominal GDP.
This is sad that our system is beset by Republicans that
think the best way
out of a
recession is to eliminate more jobs and take away workers and social protections so they can further the system that caused the economic collapse in the first place.
But in this age
of BlackBerrys and
recession pressures and working from home after hours and on weekends, family time may not be working
out the way we
thought.
To go back to Keynsianism, you don't cut spending when you're just barely struggling
out of a
recession, unless you've drunk the Hoover Kool Aid (go look at his policies in» 30 - ’31 if you
think budget - cutting's a good idea right now — utterly disastrous).
I'd really hate to
think you believed those economists who said we came
out of the
recession in the summer
of 2009.
In fact, as Steve Malanga
of the Manhattan Institute
think tank points
out, there was already a nationwide glut
of convention - center capacity even before the
recession put a big dampener on the entire sector.
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...
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.
Jack and Joe don't give a crap about the hardware you put in these devices, we're coming
out of a
recession, some people
think we're still in a
recession, they don't want to spend almost $ 1000 for essentially a toy, something they want, not need.
I personally don't
think many areas
of the country exited the
recession despite our government telling us it officially ended several years ago — looking at the lack
of adult behavior in Washington (no matter which party you prefer), and the
out of control spending and debt and no plans to reduce it makes me
think it's going to last a little longer — although I certainly hope I am wrong.
Am I the only one that
thinks that we never got
out of the
recession?
In the article with the catchy title Asleep at the wheel, or, How I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb published on 7 April 2008 James Montier points
out that company management and analysts are unwilling to revise their profit estimates in spite
of the looming
recession as everyone
thinks their business is
recession resistant.
«Our customer base has helped us through much
of the
recession, so we
think that we still have them in place, and we are always figuring
out new ways to incentivize them.»
Not to undersell the riches
of the fossil fuel industry — which Democrats keep forgetting to thank for hauling Barack Obama's moribund economy
out of recession after six grueling years — but I
think Big Climate is worth more.
Even if we do move
out a
recession, do you really
think that the legal hiring market will return to the good ol' days
of the 1990s and early - mid 2000s?
I'm selling
out all RE holdings because i
think we are on the cusp
of an even more serious problem than the last
recession.
«I
think most
of the banks have seen very slow and steady growth coming
out of the last
recession, which has been good for the market,» says Gregg Gerken, an executive vice president at TD Bank Group and head
of commercial real estate for TD Bank N.A. Banks still represent a significant capital source in the real estate industry.