Earlier this year, a trend piece in The New York Times proclaimed «Men
step out of the recession, bag on hip, bracelet on wrist.»
Not exact matches
Edwards added that he believes the
recession is now here (hence his «ultimate» adjective), «just as it was in the fall
of 2011 until global coordinated easing injected trillions and masked its impact, and will manifest itself unless the global central banks
step up far more aggressively and tune
out reality once again.»
I can't figure
out the next
step, though — I'm guessing this simply forces the global imbalances onto the commodity - exporting countries, which would presumably experience a temporary economic boom eve while the rest
of the world enters
recession?
It is my humble view and submission that Nigeria will still and shall still come
out stronger and better
of this current economic
recession without necessarily opting for a cheap idea
of selling our national assets but by urgently taking a drastic and sincere
step on some
of our untapped resources that are readily available at our disposal.
Nick Clegg replied: «If you care so much about making sure that
out of the rubble
of this
recession, we create a new economy, why won't you and indeed why won't David Cameron, take the radical
steps forward that are needed to reform our banking system.
The downside is that it leaves the Tories even more
out of step with the rest
of the world, as even a reluctant Germany plans a second fiscal stimulus and Barack Obama proposes a massive blitz to spend America
out of recession.
The $ 74.4 billion education package is a turning point for education in the state and marks a significant
step up in the long and grueling climb
out of the
recession.
Whether this is viewed as a backward
step, emasculating the social goal behind DDA 1995 or as (in the economists» language at a time
of recession and falling share values) a necessary «correction» to a situation that had got
out of hand depends on one's viewpoint.
«When first - time buyers
stepped out of the market in the fourth quarter
of 2008, at the height
of the global
recession, their absence was profoundly felt,» says Phil Soper, president and chief executive
of Royal LePage.