Sentences with phrase «solve economic problems»

The film centers on a society in the near future that attempts to solve its economic problems by shrinking people — presumably because...
Ayandokun said if the government would perform well in terms of security, it had to solve economic problems first, adding that security agencies like the Special Anti-Robbery Squad of the Nigeria Police should also be revamped to function properly.
To help solve the economic problems family dairies increasingly faced, Albert took a radical step — he converted the family farm to organic and founded Straus Family Creamery, the first 100 % certified organic creamery in the country.
The Biblical advice to the rich, that they should give their wealth to the poor, will not solve our economic problems.
And as to the comfort the gospel speaks of, it seems that Christianity ought no longer to be the comforter of the poor and the afflicted, because, forsooth, «if you comfort them you divert them from seeking material, concrete means for ending their misery; if they are comforted by faith, they will not set to work to solve the economic problems
On the other hand, if the Fed decides to delay raising rates, as the stock market is clearly hoping for, then it will give U.S. investors a chance to assess China's moves to solve its economic problems over the next few months, and respond accordingly later on.
Populist parties offer solutions that will not solve the economic problems facing the continent, the president of the German Ifo Institute told CNBC.
Growth has not solved every economic problem and growth is causing environmental problems.
Preston comments, «It is important to separate (the premises) from the concept of the market as a useful mechanism for solving some economic problems if it was set within a different value commitment and an extensive structural framework» (Church and Society in the late 20th Century.
«If the NPP has good ideas that will work to solve our economic problem, can they take it to the President?
«There is a big concern because [the government] wants research to solve an economic problem and an industry problem,» says Patrick Monfort, a marine ecologist with CNRS in Montpellier and the general secretary of SNCS - FSU, the national trade union for scientific researchers.
A worksheet for the introduction to Solving the Economic Problem according to the syllabus of Edexcel IGCSE Economics
I remember a friend remarking when LA Moca went through its financial crisis that the institution — which is so deep in art by Rothko and Rauschenberg — could have sold a minor work by each artist without compromising the collection and solved its economic problems.
The Bancor protocol technology solves the economic problem known as «Double Coincidence of Wants» — where a seller of a set number of tokens must find buyers wanting the same number of tokens — at the same time — in order for a trade to take place.

Not exact matches

The Trump administration argues that such maneuvers aren't a high priority, because economic growth will solve a lot of the problem.
We've been told that we need to save more, that housing prices are unsustainable, that bailouts in Europe will help solve the globe's economic problems, only to see Greece and Italy descend further into despair.
During the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, global leaders discussed solutions for a must - solve problem.
Profit sharing is not going to solve all the economic problems of the working middle class.
In one sense, IoT presents a classic case for government regulation, in which market participants have no economic incentive to solve the problem themselves.
There was a general feeling that the deficit was cyclical in nature and that a rebound in economic growth would solve the deficit problem.
One is a world in which our economic problems are largely solved, profits are on the mend, and things will soon be back to normal, except for a lot of unemployed people whose fate is, let's face it, of no concern to Wall Street.
For 30 years, SVN has been the leading peer - to - peer network of mission - driven business leaders, social entrepreneurs, and impact investors who are leveraging the power of business to solve social, economic, and environmental problems.
It is an economic problem that the Fed's tools would be particularly ill suited to solve; the Fed can help address weak demand in the economy but can't do much about a negative supply shock, which is what a trade war would be.
The British economic recovery is still fragile and faces many of the same problems Carney seemed unable to solve during his tenure in Canada: sluggish labour productivity, businesses that are stockpiling cash, and a property bubble that seems at risk of bursting.
Reducing the human factor in money supply and institutional involvement in money distribution to the minimum is an important step forward for our society, and hopefully, we will witness a widespread economic reformation in an attempt to solve the inherent problems with paper money.
Another reason is that cities with a strong entrepreneurial culture and local control of economic resources have more capacity to solve problems on their own and are more resilient and adaptable in times of distress.
Some remain optimistic about economic growth in Europe, despite many problems have not been solved, especially in Southern Europe.
In other words, even if we succeed in having good economic growth and sustaining it for a longer period than in earlier expansions, it will not solve all our unemployment problems.
As the charter of the New Urbanism says: «Physical solutions by themselves will not solve social and economic problems, but neither can economic vitality, community stability, and environmental health be sustained without a coherent and supportive physical framework.»
If «colonialism» exists it provokes resentment; if it exists merely in economic forms that seem more appropriate to our age, it is still going to lead to difficulties, and danger is going to arise if the Western nations imagine that all problems can be solved by the power of money.
Rather than admit the failure of capitalism and pursue socialism, FDR» like other Presidents before him» sought to solve domestic problems by overseas economic expansion.
Nothing is more clear in the light of history than this: new political, economic and ecclesiastical machinery does not alone solve problems; it creates problems, and, above all, it puts a strain on moral foundations, on spiritual resources, that must successfully be met or the best - laid plans come down in ruin.
They accepted the economists» argument that rapid economic growth, national and global, is required to address the problem of poverty and that, with the attainment of prosperity, other problems could be solved as well.
Some of the hardest problems of our day are moral problems; rather than economic or political ones; but, moral problems as they are, many of them can not be solved except on a religious basis.
The promise that giving priority to economic growth will solve the problem of population growth has been proven false.
The idea that the quest for economic growth alone will solve environmental problems is no longer plausible.
(3) The claims to solve the population and environmental problems by economic growth have always seemed somewhat implausible.
He points out that economic theory considers itself as the science of scarcity, whereas «the economic problem has been morethan solved among the rich sixth of the world's population.
An overwhelming U.S. military victory may create more problems in the Middle Last than it can solve, such as an unlimited U.S. military presence, more intractable Israeli - Palestinian hostilities, intensified Arab anti-Americanism, masse's of refugees, Syrian and Iranian ascendancy, immense economic burden and unending terrorism.
We're not helping solve the world's economic and health problems.
The students Brooks examined in 2001, who had entered adolescence after the fall of the Berlin Wall, spent their formative years in a world predicted by Francis Fukuyama in 1992: «The struggle for recognition, the willingness to risk one's life for a purely abstract goal, the worldwide ideological struggle that called forth daring, courage, imagination, and idealism, will be replaced by economic calculation, the endless solving of technical problems, environmental concerns, and the satisfaction of sophisticated consumer demands.»
These religious issues — personal formation and making sense of life — are often disguised by our relative affluence and the apparent assumption that getting everyone to middle - class economic status will solve all problems.
On the contrary, he said, «To judge from the behavior and the achievements of the wealthy classes today in any quarter of the world, the outlook is very depressing» and he added: «If the economic problem is solved, mankind will be deprived of its traditional purpose... must we not expect a nervous breakdown?»
And we hoped rapid economic growth would not so much solve our moral problems as make them irrelevant.
In «The Fusion of Civilizations: The Case for Global Optimism» (Foreign Affairs, May / June 2016), Kishore Mahbubani and Lawrence Summers champion «pragmatic problem - solving» in a «stable and sustainable rules - based order,» undergirded by a scientific, technological, and economic consensus that encourages a «fusion of civilizations.»
The challenge to technology to solve the problem of sufficient energy to power continuing increase of economic activity is complicated by the heightened concern to reduce pollution and especially to avoid disastrous changes in weather.
And all of these efforts to solve problems or to control some aspect of our economic, political, social, or educational life require the application of theoretical knowledge.
In «The Fusion of Civilizations: The Case for Global Optimism» (Foreign Affairs, May / June 2016), Kishore Mahbubani and Lawrence Summers champion «pragmatic problem - solving» in a «stable and sustainable rule - based order,» undergirded by a scientific, technological, and economic consensus that encourages a «fusion of civilizations.»
Other speakers emphasised: the impact of cheaper and more accessible digital technology on identifying as well as solving problems (Mr Salesh Kumar and Dr Washington Otieno); the importance of realising the nutritional and economic value of food as well as accounting for the environmental impacts of food production (Dr Karen Brooks); and the opportunities for novel products from so - called waste, such as phosphorus recycling (Dr Dana Cordell); Novaq (Dr Cedric Simon); and anaerobic digestion (Dr Bernadette McCabe).
On paper, «clean meat» solves so many socio - economic problems that if Memphis is able to get its products on shelves at an affordable price it's hard to imagine consumers won't be interested.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z