Sentences with phrase «so in a weak economy»

People and firms are highly vulnerable and will remain so in a weak economy.

Not exact matches

If we assume that Beijing has been reluctant to do this in the past, and is only doing so in response to weaker expected growth numbers, then it would suggest the latter explanation, which implies a higher, not a lower, discount rate, and so a lower «multiple» for the Chinese economy.
So, for example, I would argue that in the early stages of reform, especially in countries that have suffered many years of terrible economies and weak investment, crony capitalism can be consistent with high levels of growth because the kinds of programs that lead to growth — mostly massive investment programs in countries in which capital stock is excessively low — benefit the elites directly.
So, we have to rely more on domestic demand, and in a weak or falling economy, that is unstable.
So far the Federal Reserve seems Hell - bent on raising interest rates in the face of a soft economy and weak employment wage growth.
In terms of the actual economy in the Eurozone, in aggregate, I think that the Eurozone is roughly a 1.5 % growth economy, but again that's in aggregate so it masks the big divisions between the core countries like Germany and the weaker countries like Greece and Portugal, and Italy as welIn terms of the actual economy in the Eurozone, in aggregate, I think that the Eurozone is roughly a 1.5 % growth economy, but again that's in aggregate so it masks the big divisions between the core countries like Germany and the weaker countries like Greece and Portugal, and Italy as welin the Eurozone, in aggregate, I think that the Eurozone is roughly a 1.5 % growth economy, but again that's in aggregate so it masks the big divisions between the core countries like Germany and the weaker countries like Greece and Portugal, and Italy as welin aggregate, I think that the Eurozone is roughly a 1.5 % growth economy, but again that's in aggregate so it masks the big divisions between the core countries like Germany and the weaker countries like Greece and Portugal, and Italy as welin aggregate so it masks the big divisions between the core countries like Germany and the weaker countries like Greece and Portugal, and Italy as well.
And it's been very weak since 2008; we've now hit the point now where the private sector, the households, are so heavily in debt that they just can't continue taking on new or additional debt to make credit expand enough to drive the economy.
Why should it happen in 2014 when the global economy is so weak?
Addressing the press conference, dubbed `' The true state of the economy and a government in a state of denial: The NPP's response to the Senchi Consensus, and connected matters» Minority leader of the NPP, Osei Kyei Mensah Bonsu said, `' assessment of the Ghanaian economy so far point to an economy with weak and deteriorating fundamentals.»
Britain's economy during the 1970s was so weak that Foreign Secretary James Callaghan warned his fellow Labour Cabinet members in 1974 of the possibility of «a breakdown of democracy», telling them: «If I were a young man, I would emigrate.»
+ The Not - So - Good 1) Weak horn & head - lights 2) Single Cabin lamp; no light in glove - box or foot - wells 3) New Optitron Combimeter displays only basic information (misses out on average fuel economy, cruising range, etc.) 4) Rear windows don't roll down completely 5) Power window & Central locking switches are not back - lit 6) No dead pedal
In dealing with the continued weak economy, our leaders are so determined not to repeat the perceived mistakes of the 1930s that they are risking policies with possibly far worse consequences designed by the same people at the Fed who ran policy with the short term view that asset bubbles don't matter because the fallout can be managed after they pop.
«Regarding the latter, it's been very frustrating to accurately predict the primary causes of the current market turmoil — the weak U.S. economy characterized by persistently high unemployment and a feeble housing market, plus the sovereign debt crisis in Europe — but to have done so a year too early (lest you think we are engaging in revisionist history, we've attached excerpts from our July 2010 and 2010 annual letter in an endnote at the end of this letter).
Q: So, if a weak economy is bad for both Berkshire and the U.S. in general.
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