Sentences with phrase «rapid economic growth which»

Countries like China and India are experiencing rapid economic growth which is good for their people and good for the world.

Not exact matches

This gain in credibility contributed to a rapid decline in long - term interest rates, which in turn significantly reduced public debt charges and contributed to stronger economic growth and government revenues.
Capital spending is driven by high profit margins and rapid earnings growth, which typically doesn't emerge until well into a new economic expansion.
These economies are «starting from an extremely low economic base and have the ability to embrace technology and tap into an increasingly urbanized work force, which can lead to a relatively long period of rapid growth,» Mordy says.
«Saudi Arabia has been very successful at attracting a steadily growing flow of foreign direct investment [FDI] since 2005, which contributed to the country's rapid and sustained economic growth,» Al - Dabbagh says.
During the past few decades, the countries that have made rapid economic strides have been the ones that have encouraged high levels of investment in entrepreneur development, which has led to the acceleration of economic growth and the creation of jobs.
With ministers banking on rapid private sector growth to replace the estimated 490,000 public sector jobs expected to be lost, the Prime Minister backed a world of «unprecedented economic change» in which small start - up companies can become global giants in a matter of years.
There are tens of thousands of unreported protests in China each year, a rising number of which are over environmental disputes in a country where rapid economic growth has taken its toll on the air, water and land.
By specializing on traditional health and agricultural systems in which we have great comparative advantage, we can achieve the most rapid growth in improving economic development and health status in the short run.
The former have been able to use their scientists and engineers for rapid economic growth, whereas the so - called developing countries (which in reality are not developing at all) are relegated to the role of consumers of technological products.
Overall the works provide insight into a nation which is the subject of enthralling and controversial debates and which will play a critical role on the global stage in the 21st century, not only because of its classical traditions, but also because of its rapid economic and cultural growth.
China and India's massive spike in emissions are intimately linked to their governments» frenetic embrace of this export model of development, which always sacrificed environmental and labor standards in the name of rapid economic growth.
Evidently, concerns like long - term human wellbeing, biodiversity preservation and the integrity of Earth's body are momentarily at odds with powerful economic and political forces which relentlessly and unrealistically maintain an economic system marked by unrestricted and increasing per capita consumption, unbridled and expanding economic globalization, and continuous and rapid growth of the human population.
The results are most evident in the projected change in China's share of the total RCI, which nearly triples (from 5.5 % to 15.2 %), reflecting China's rapid economic growth and the large number of its citizens whose incomes are projected to rise above the development threshold in the coming two decades.
In the experiment, greenhouse gas emissions in the coming century were assumed to follow a trajectory that climate modelers refer to as the A1B scenario, in which global economic growth is rapid and driven by a balanced portfolio of energy sources, including fossil fuels, renewables, and nuclear.
Prior to Turkey's recent economic difficulties, projections by Turkey's Electricity Generating and Transmission Corporation (TEAS), a public company which owns and operates 15 thermal and 30 hydroelectric plants generating 91 % of Turkey's electricity, had indicated that rapid growth in electricity consumption would continue over the next 15 years.
Those post-war years were marked by the country's rapid, coal - fueled economic growth, which bathed the northern hemisphere in aerosols.
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