Sentences with phrase «slower gdp growth»

The cooling won't be felt just in reduced transactions; it'll also be felt in a drop in real estate — related jobs, which will contribute to slower GDP growth.
Additionally, it is also reported that the Chinese inflation rate has begun to decline, reiterating the prospect of slower GDP growth.
Secular Stagnation Taken as a whole, the latest Fed projections of slower GDP growth, low unemployment and still - low inflation suggest that concerns of a so - called secular stagnation may be taking root among Fed policymakers.
So the next couple of years are likely to see slower GDP growth and possibly a tendency to rising inflation.
First, the idea that slower GDP growth will cause social disturbance or even chaos because of angry, unemployed mobs is not true.
Tightening of monetary policy meant to cool the housing market over the past year, combined with a wind - down in public works, has served to slow GDP growth into the single digits.
Either GDP growth declines, especially if slowing GDP growth also results in slowing consumption growth.
And continued slow GDP growth may keep Yellen or her successor from hiking too quickly or maybe at all.
Notwithstanding the broad pattern of slowing GDP growth in 2004, business and consumer confidence remained very strong during the year.
In 2015 the fear of long - term slow GDP growth has dropped inflation expectations in both US and Canada below 2 %
Now, suppose some smart technologists offered them the option to eliminate all climate damage in return for slowing GDP growth by only 0.12 percentage points every year over the century.

Not exact matches

If China's GDP growth slowed to 5 % in 2012 from its 9.5 % clip in 2011, economists Craig Alexander and Pascal Gauthier wrote, oil would fall to US$ 65 a barrel, non-energy commodity receipts would plunge 31.5 %, Canada's current account deficit would double, and the loonie would fall to 83 cents US.
«While China's total debt growth slowed notably in 2017 with a drop in the non-financial corporate debt - to - GDP ratio largely offset by rising household and financial sector debt,» the group said.
Global growth is still too slow — the planet's GDP is expected to grow by 2.4 % this year, according to the World Bank, which is actually below its 2.8 % growth in 2011.
GDP growth is slowing, oil prices haven't recovered, and the housing market is no longer providing the lift it once did.
In the long run, Ritter found, investors «would have been better off avoiding countries where per - capita GDP rose the most and investing in countries with slower per - capita growth
The fact of the matter is quarterly GDP growth hasn't often crested the 2 % threshold during the post-recession era and 2013 has actually slowed down somewhat from 2012.
But the country's GDP growth will slow to 6.4 percent in 2018 and 6.3 percent in 2019 due to monetary policy changes and the government's efforts to curtail credit and debt, it added.
«The services aggregate was the main driver to the slower growth in GDP, contributing 0.23 percentage points.
America's GDP growth is also too slow to boost Canada's fortunes.
«It doesn't only matter how big GDP is in the future, but also how it gets there, such as by slow steady growth, or by periods of rapid growth mixed with recession,» he said.
Global growth is seen rising 3.4 percent next year, with China slowing to a 7 percent annual pace, Europe expanding by 1.2 percent and Japan eking out 1 percent gain in GDP.
There are two main reasons for the commodity pullback, says de los Reyes: China's GDP growth has slowed from about 11 % a year to single digits, and supply has finally caught up with demand.
Flaherty saw this relationship between GDP growth and government revenues first - hand when he was Ontario's Finance Minister, during a time when the government's budgetary position eroded due to slower - than - anticipated economic growth.
«The argument is the types of things we're doing now with information technology just don't show up in GDP because a lot of what we do on the Internet is free,» or very nearly so, says Philip Cross, a former chief of economic analysis at Statistics Canada who wrote a paper on the slow - growth economy for the Fraser Institute think tank last year.
GDP growth slowed to 7.7 % in 2013, the lowest level in 14 years.
«Leading indicators suggest that domestic demand will continue to perform strongly in the second half of the year, but we think the quarter - on - quarter run - rate in headline GDP (gross domestic product) growth will slow to 0.4 percent - to - 0.5 percent quarter - on - quarter,» Claus Vistesen, chief euro zone economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said in an email.
He predicts that the crunch will slow earnings gains to at least a point below GDP growth over the next decade.
Malaysia's second - quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth slowed to its lowest rate since the third quarter of 2013.
This is not to say that Boh Plantations isn't feeling the pressure from a toxic mix of headwinds that has seen Malaysia's second - quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth slow to its lowest rate since the third quarter of 2013.
China's GDP growth will slow if a trade war with the U.S. ensues.
«China's economic growth has slowed over the past few years... but economic growth has rebounded this year, with GDP reaching 6.9 % in the first half, and may achieve 7 % in the second half,» Zhou was quoted as saying at the G30 International Banking Seminar in Washington on Sunday.
The Chinese government says that GDP growth there has slowed to 6.9 % in 2015, and that it will grow by 6.8 % next year after averaging more than 10 % for the past decade.
Finally, in a nominal GDP targeting regime, a decline in r - star caused by slower trend growth automatically leads to a higher rate of trend inflation, providing a larger buffer to respond to economic downturns.
Indeed, GDP growth has slowed from a peak of 3.1 % last year to virtually nothing.
Here's a point I made in that post, regarding GDP growth: «the current economy is like a slow runner who still hasn't caught up to a goal line that's moving closer as she runs towards it.»
Although their growth rates have slowed, their share of GDP has continued to increase and the importance of these countries to the pace of global growth has also increased.
By 2015, analysts had significantly marked down GDP growth, based on the fact that the labor force had contracted more than they thought back in 2007 and productivity growth was slower.
Since then, though, trade growth has again slowed dramatically, trailing even the tepid pace of global GDP growth.
Either way, the potential growth rate of GDP has slowed considerably.
Gross called the rate of return, discovered by Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel, a «historical freak, a mutation likely never to be seen again» in a «New Normal economy» in which GDP growth is «slowing significantly.»
In fact I suspect the reason credit growth in the past year or two has not slowed nearly as sharply as it should, or as sharply as required by the economic analysis implicit in the Third Plenum reform proposals, is precisely because of the expected impact of meaningful credit constraint on GDP growth.
If labor and indeed government must demand some recompense for the four decade's long downward tilting teeter - totter of wealth creation, and if GDP growth itself is slowing significantly due to deleveraging in a New Normal economy, then how can stocks appreciate at 6.6 % real?
Beijing can manage a rapidly declining pace of credit creation, which must inevitably result in much slower although healthier GDP growth.
Their studies were the basis of much of the austerity movement in Europe and the US, based on their claim that debt - to - GDP ratios over 90 % are linked to much slower economic growth.
Here's a point I made in that post, regarding GDP growth: «the current economy is like a slow runner... Read more
Most recently, however, slower real wage growth among blue - collar and non-managerial workers has dinged consumer spending, and thus GDP, a bit.
Job growth has slowed over the past few months and GDP is growing at only 1.2 %, but there aren't the declines we usually see in recessions.
The strong dollar, changes in the economy creating mismatches between workers» skills and the needs of business, and well - intentioned government programs that aid the jobless but also create disincentives to seek training and employment have slowed annual GDP growth to 1.8 percent since 2000 from 3.4 percent the prior two decades.
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