If we want continued economic success we must continue the process of economic reform. |
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The need for exchange rate adjustments depends on the importance and character of economic shocks. |
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If true, it is a feat of economic wizardry unmatched in the western industrialized world in the last quarter century. |
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As soon as we see the first signs of a loss of economic momentum in the U.S., pressure will come off the euro. |
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Thereby whole generations live under the shadow of crippling debts that require extraordinary and sustained levels of economic growth to offset. |
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As I have mentioned, the Act had the twin objectives, in summary, of economic advancement and environmental protection. |
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Who in the world would we rather have as allies and fellow travellers in pursuing the twin challenges of economic performance and social justice? |
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Since independence, the twin forces of economic development and population growth have literally bulldozed their way through the city's greenery. |
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This plan is unnecessary and patently unjustifiable in this time of economic crisis. |
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They understood, too, that appeals to racial pride are a dead end without a larger vision of economic justice that cuts across racial divisions. |
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The sense of moral superiority afforded by this point of view was perhaps in lieu of economic, educational, and social opportunities. |
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The single-minded pursuit of economic growth can exact a heavy toll on a community. |
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In conclusion, the ultimate aim of economic development will reflect a blended approach from several different players. |
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This has occurred because of differences in the worldviews and political orientations of economic analysts. |
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In his mind, he is already leader, leading Britain to fresh, unconquered heights of economic glory. |
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This is nonetheless the India of economic potential, the place where the fortunes of adventurous nabobs were made. |
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According to the neoclassical paradigm of economic theory, production conditions are basically the same everywhere. |
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Because of economic hardships and pressure from foreign countries, Kaunda eventually allowed for multiparty elections. |
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He thinks of Europe as being a brake on the ideology of economic unilateralism which is capitalist, conservative and reactionary. |
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An inclusive agenda for human rights must make human rights the basis of economic systems. |
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Thirty two years later, the life of the Bahamian is still sadly crippled by the manacles of marginalisation and the chains of economic slavery. |
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The ethnic and religious strife is really a matter of an uneven distribution of economic resources and opportunities. |
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Those figures are beyond more or less any other model of economic intervention in supporting new business start-ups. |
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Nor am I reassured by Galston's rather cavalier dismissal of economic liberty's importance for individual self-determination. |
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Given these economic circumstances, the role of economic planners in the government cannot be overemphasized. |
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The lowest levels of economic growth were in sub-Saharan African countries. |
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He took a hammering for presiding over persistently high levels of unemployment and for less than impressive rates of economic growth. |
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The growth of economic inequality has been starkly evident in the auto industry. |
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The process of state formation lagged far behind in comparison with the speed-up of economic development that took place in peat mining. |
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To illustrate the cultural underpinnings of economic success, McGurn tells a story about a visit he made to an ethnic Chinese family in Manila. |
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However, the reliance on overlong interviews, dealing with the nitty-gritty of economic practices, really slows things down. |
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In another passage Weber defines the tasks of economic history as a precursor of neoclassical cliometrics. |
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A second approach, championed by Sidney Pollard, is to think of economic change in regional terms. |
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That's a lot of high-profile hoopla for a record that's essentially a chronicle of economic and emotional poverty. |
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Still ahead on the program, women in one Egyptian village are sowing the seeds of economic success, as traditional art meets high fashion. |
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The survey found that differences of economic status were the main reasons for variations in the happiness level of elderly people. |
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But in the last days, the great outlines of economic proposals have appeared. |
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In many cases, it is also the right strategy from the standpoint of economic efficiency. |
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They have been unwilling to take forthright stands either on issues of peace or of economic justice. |
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Media pundits and politicians point to trivial decreases in the headline unemployment rate as evidence of economic recovery. |
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He apparently possesses some type of economic omniscience, lacking in the rest of the general public. |
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And by distributing a new pattern of economic activity over a broad rural area, even while stifling growth, prisons create sprawl. |
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It was my disillusionment with the lack of economic opportunities associated with stagflation that politicized me. |
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The synthesist of economic theory of the middle of the century, John Stuart Mill, had only the most marginal academic connections. |
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The trend has surprised industry observers, who say soju has been immune to the effects of economic recessions in the past. |
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The hard sciences, for example, are at the cutting edge of economic development. |
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On the home front, evidence of a strengthening of economic activity continues to accumulate. |
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There is a large degree of economic happenstance governing the trend, observers like Palmer say. |
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This agreement was a form of economic interventionism, which helped to stabilize world coffee prices. |
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The abolition of all taxes on production and exchange, he held, would result in a tremendous spurt of economic activity. |
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As a result of this 'coercive socialization', the global economy in effect dictates the kinds of economic policies to be pursued by states. |
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Welsh Labour's unrepentant style of authoritarian centralism is less a question of economic policy than of political process. |
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Given your recent history, do you see a future of economic relations with your enormous neighbor? |
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It does not inspire optimism for the future of economic development in Scotland. |
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This indicates that differences in the rate of accumulation of economic knowledge due to natural ability do not exist. |
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I'm not sure that my knowledge of economic theories qualifies me to judge his arguments, but it does make for some food for thought. |
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In desperation, she entered warily into a sexual liaison with an army captain, who offered some promise of economic stability. |
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The growing acceptability of economic arguments over human values are making female children a 'bad investment' in patriarchal societies. |
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Next we shall analyse the influence of economic status on various aspects of life, such as standard of living and education of children. |
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If anything, he was inclined to dismiss monetary policy as the weak sister of economic stimulus. |
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This leads to a sharp decline in the level of economic activity, and the economy enters a period of stagnation. |
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While the luxury cars zip around the streets of the town, the wheels of economic and social justice turn a lot more slowly in Anantapur. |
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Mormon crickets are of economic importance because of their impact on rangeland, pasture, alfalfa, row crops, and vegetable gardens. |
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Hitler's growing involvement in the details of economic life matched an increasing intervention in military affairs. |
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Her description of economic rationalism is primarily based on its enemies' assumptions, not on economic rationalists' actual views. |
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Reaganomics has been an uneasy and shifting coalition of several clashing schools of economic thought. |
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The process of economic reform had inevitably increased individual autonomy. |
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The extent of the economic regression for many countries is astonishing, as is the pace of economic advancement for a small number of countries. |
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Particularly refreshing is the adoption in this volume of the notion of Eurasia as an integral ecumene of economic and cultural interaction. |
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The two lichens of economic importance are Iceland moss, Cetraria islandica, and reindeer moss, Cladonia rangiferina. |
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The Kok report tries to do away with a belief that jobs need to be sacrificed at the altar of economic growth. |
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I don't hear a lot of calls on behalf of economic officials saying, yes, please come and invest. |
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Noble ideas about feeding the world are being used to cloak ambitions of economic dominance. |
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If they do, then this amount would represent a lowerbound estimate for the true level of economic benefits. |
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He intends to campaign on issues such as law and order and the number of economic migrants trying to get into Britain. |
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It is a natural and familiar process of economic growth, led by economic connections between regions. |
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The threats of the past have transformed into agreements of economic, cultural and scientific cooperation. |
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The Court held that picketing could also be a tool of economic coercion and restraint of trade, and hence could be regulated. |
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His research explores the question of economic development within the slave economies of the antebellum American South. |
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They were the first to deal with the issue in a systematic way and to apply their conclusions to the problem of economic depressions. |
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A revival of economic strength is, in my view, the most urgent and realistic task. |
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As World War II began, after a decade of economic depression, the United States was not a rich country. |
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But he certainly helped to accelerate the rate of economic and social change in the cities and towns along the shore of Lake Michigan. |
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The stock markets are not the only indicators of economic health, of course, but there was bad news aplenty elsewhere last week. |
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Rather, with the rise of risk capital, the market has become the critical nexus of economic growth and innovation. |
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In short, the modernization of economic structures leads to a rise, rather than a decline, in archaic attitudes of mind. |
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The lack of economic resources also prevents the community from producing any printed literature that might bind its members together. |
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It also implies a potential rollback of many aspects of economic liberalisation. |
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Late last week, a raft of economic statistics suggested Greenspan's cries may go unheard. |
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Mr. Dixit is also concerned about the slowing down of economic reforms in the country, owing to inner contradictions within the ruling coalition. |
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The avoidance of more immediate price increases is therefore not merely necessary, but vital to the achievement of economic stability. |
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Any further delays to the Act should be seen as an act of economic sabotage and all those involved in its creation should be held accountable. |
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Recent surveys portray consumers as a bunch of economic sad sacks, their confidence draining month after month. |
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Getting the public finances back into balance must be a key objective of economic policy. |
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The continuation of economic austerity policies under these conditions has provoked a wave of upheavals throughout the continent. |
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Dr. Fontana's interests include macroeconomics, monetary economics, history of economic thought, and methodology. |
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The resulting policy of economic austerity caused unrest and demonstrations. |
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The news of economic prosperity doesn't tally with the headlines in the newspapers. |
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Reformist leaders in the majlis regularly blast President Khatami for failing to tackle a long list of economic and social issues. |
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I can only assume the Taswegians have gotten away with this gross act of economic heresy because the eyes of economists are on larger markets. |
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This sort of economic and political centralization is the really problematic legacy of colonialism. |
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The paranoid school of economic history is again at work right before our eyes. |
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The underlying explanation of economic action is therefore not logical, but non-logical. |
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People often pose the question in terms of social equality, but marriage is also an institution of economic rights. |
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With these types of economic freedoms many people will jump on the bandwagon and the projected GDP growth figures are very likely to be met. |
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The mathematization of economic theory has been resoundingly ineffective in understanding of the role of entrepreneurs in economic activity. |
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The maximin rule of economic theory doesn't necessarily fit existential queries! |
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She has a long-standing interest in the social structural bases of economic activity. |
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Socialism is and has always been considered a system of economic organization of society. |
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Still, there are those who would stifle healthy and vigorous discussion of economic issues in the name of authority. |
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Each positive piece of economic news last fall was matched by equally bad economic tidings. |
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Gillingham's libretto revolves around the conflict between the champions of economic statism and proponents of economic liberalism. |
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Monetary policy alone cannot achieve high and sustainable rates of economic growth. |
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In 1876 the church adopted tithing, which required members to contribute a tenth of their income, as its primary means of economic support. |
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So, we have the prospect of a government with a smaller majority and facing voters who are less likely to be tolerant of economic pain. |
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Must the emerging borderless world of economic globalization also be a superficial and orderless world? |
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Spirituality is an extra that's added on to a secular base of economic savvy, career know-how, and social smarts. |
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The two political leaders conduct their argument on the margins of economic policy. |
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This illustrates a very important point about how to best judge the success of economic policy. |
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During this period of economic recovery, the Euroland trade surplus with the United States has risen, not fallen. |
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This text will be helpful to beginners in the field of economic botany, but the authors recommend further research for the serious student. |
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As a developing nation, Brazil has adopted punitive interest rates to stay afloat in the midst of economic shocks. |
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Equally important, the diminution of the middle orders threatens one of the historic sources of economic vitality and innovation. |
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The country is facing all the great issues of economic change, regionalism, and cultural and geographic diversity, while Americanization proceeds apace. |
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Now they do business year round, which has been a boon in times of economic crisis. |
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The demand for government loans has also been criticized by some later commentators for starving industry of funds, and so holding down the rate of economic growth. |
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He warned that the tide of economic and social change would leave Swindon washed up, stranded and decaying if progress was not made with plans to overhaul the centre soon. |
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But for most of us real wealth will not be found in the arcane alphabet soup of economic indicators but in the starker credit and debit entries of our bank statements. |
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And it has done Scotland the honour of counting us in, at least as an associate, in one of a burgeoning number of economic, political and cultural links across the North Sea. |
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The new government will be pressed to reconcile religious conflicts and work out a policy that is considerate of the poor and mitigates the ill effects of economic growth. |
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Capital in the Twenty-First Century is already being hailed as a seminal work of economic thought, and with very good reason. |
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The view that trade was the engine of economic growth was a central tenet of mercantilism, the European economic orthodoxy in the first half of the eighteenth century. |
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A second problem is the existence of other types of economic rents that go largely untaxed, which struck the opponents of Henry George as terribly important a century ago. |
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The U.S. is actually holding up its end of the bargain quite well, and assuming the yoke of economic leadership. |
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But the insured losses for insurance companies may not reflect the sum total of economic damage suffered by the region. |
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He argued that these policies were of dubious benefit in terms of economic development and represented to some degree an unsanctioned redistribution of wealth. |
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According to this model, all states in the developing world were expected to go through a series of economic stages before becoming fully developed. |
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By any standards, it's an extraordinary record of economic achievement. |
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Now, Texas is the object of economic envy and California is the object lesson, the toxic state. |
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After all, after the second world war, Harry S. Truman was very concerned about re-establishing a rational pattern of economic relations through Europe. |
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He said the resurgence of economic activity in Solwezi following the opening of Kansanshi mine was benefiting not only the district but also the entire province. |
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In his account, the government emerged with a more explicit role as a generator of economic growth, and urbanisation was shown to be a hitherto neglected feature. |
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A week does not pass without another set of economic numbers blasting through the ether. |
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While they never succeeded in reversing the problem of economic disparity, they provided opposition to those seeking support for an urban-based model for change. |
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The exhibition was staged across two very different urban sites, which although linked by a short bus ride are worlds apart in terms of economic and social infrastructure. |
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The initial step to deal with discrimination is to introduce a structural change in discriminative legislation and redistribution of economic and political resources. |
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The notion that economies, as a whole, sometimes lack sufficient drive derives from a faulty set of economic doctrines that focus on the demand side of the aggregate economy. |
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It is globalism of economic processes that account for why the world, and not just the single nation, is the relevant domain to consider in understanding this. |
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Indeed, who wants to exude innocence in these times of economic upheaval, violence in Syria, and political distress? |
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Many economic liberals have an optimistic view of economic globalization. |
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Given the shallowness of the domestic market, and its vulnerability to harvest failure, foreign markets played a leading role in the stimulation of economic growth. |
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Politicians robbed of economic decision-making organize their vote banks along lines of religious and cultural difference, promoting fear and hatred. |
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To date Kim Jong-il's rogue state has been kept in check by a 1994 treaty that provided for the construction of light water nuclear reactors and the granting of economic aid. |
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I fear that this worshipful praise drowns out criticism and that we are robbed of the benefits of conducting an open public debate over the course of economic policy. |
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There is a strong body of economic thought that says cutting taxes when a government is running such a healthy budget surplus is the best way to sustain economic growth. |
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The narrow view of economic democracy articulated by the Movement meant that the organization of labour as proletarian labour throughout the economy remained intact. |
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The dramatic slump in the share value is all the more galling for investors, who had come to rely on the defensive food sector in times of economic uncertainty. |
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Measures of economic output that try to correct for traditionally unmeasured or mismeasured inputs lead to different productivity estimates than the traditional approaches. |
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It may be permissible to call them economic conflicts because they concern that sphere of human life which is, in common speech, known as the sphere of economic activities. |
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That nation is on the brink of economic Armageddon and so might we be. |
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The crisis resulted in a new round of economic reforms to increase foreign investment and liberalize trade and thus reinforced their outward orientation. |
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The processes of economic imperialism, proletarian enslavement and continuous war are explained painlessly through Winston and Julia's private resistance. |
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But for the integrity and the respect of the innocent billions, earning their daily bread under the confines of economic stagnation, that deserve a shelter of peace. |
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Once the boom began, one had to be a connoisseur of economic data to comprehend the state of the economy because it was so misreported in the mainstream media. |
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In the past, the Malays were tied to their agrarian communities, and the British brought in Chinese and Indians to partake in different spheres of economic activities. |
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The comprehensive coverage of economic modelling, and productivity and efficiency analyses as well as workforce themes, is treated briefly in the following part. |
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This is an organic form of economic development whose growth will be more like the internet or the blogosphere than some giant centralized program. |
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The dismissal comes after Tanaka's latest row with bureaucrats and their political backers threatened to sidetrack Koizumi's goal of economic reforms. |
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A small degree of economic growth was recorded in 1995, despite a sense of economic crisis in the country, which led to the introduction of economic austerity measures. |
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Most of us choose to live under the yoke of economic oppression. |
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Copland's populism represented a voluntary retreat from hard-edged modernism in an attempt to reach a wider public at a time of economic hardship. |
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His principal teaching and research interests include monetary economics, macroeconomics, the history of economic thought, and development economics. |
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There have been rumblings of a military coup, although the military brass is not anxious to assume power under conditions of economic catastrophe. |
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The company hoped for some sort of economic alchemy that would improve business. |
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The albino crisis is a bleak spot in a time of economic optimism in Tanzania. |
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Beyond this, we fail to see the centrality of economic growth in Democratic messaging. |
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But as a model of economic fairness, or of the role of universities in social mobility, it is unsatisfying. |
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Under Merriam's leadership, this organization quickly established itself as the primary center for the practice of economic ornithology and mammalogy in the United States. |
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More and more western communities surrounded by forests are responding to the threat of destructive wildfire with a wide range of economic and policy changes. |
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Turkey has had more than a decade of economic boom, and is now the sixth-most-visited tourist destination in the world. |
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The fact that rigidity in the monetary unit's purchasing power is unthinkable and unrealizable does not impair the methods of economic calculation. |
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Isaacs grew up in Britain, first Liverpool, then London, during a period of economic turmoil and conservative revival. |
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That is making it nearly impossible to craft monetary policy that is both hawkish on inflation, and doesn't throw huge economies deeper into the slough of economic despond. |
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After all, journalists and pundits frequently tell us, investments from abroad are key to the uplift of poor nations, especially in this era of economic globalization. |
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In times of economic crisis, xenophobia blooms along with political conflict, protectionism and, in some places, racism. |
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Already, Gen X joblessness is leading to all sorts of economic strains. |
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The nonfarm payroll report leaves out a lot of economic pain, and provides an incomplete picture of changes in the labor market. |
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During this time of economic boom in Italy, his new factory grew and prospered in the production of baseboards, trim and cornices for the building industry. |
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The barefoot doctor system would not survive the turbulent years of economic reform. |
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It is the old problem of what a victor is to do with the vanquished, if the the latter is to gain the bare minimum of economic independence. |
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One can reduce the disconfirmations of economic generalizations by specifying a margin of error. |
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Those are fighting words, of course, and the people who presently hold the high ground of economic power in society will not be amused. |
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The precise start and end of the Industrial Revolution is still debated among historians, as is the pace of economic and social changes. |
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The gradual breakdown and transformation of economic and social linkages and infrastructure resulted in increasingly localized outlooks. |
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By 1000, Bruges and Ghent held regular trade fairs behind castle walls, a tentative return of economic life to western Europe. |
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Most of the conspirators were senators, who had a variety of economic, political, or personal motivations for carrying out the assassination. |
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Towards the end of her reign, a series of economic and military problems weakened her popularity. |
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This same period of economic and political uncertainty, however, produced an unsurpassed literary flowering in England. |
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Scotland experienced the beginnings of economic expansion that allowed it to close this gap. |
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In many cases, socioeconomists focus on the social impact of some sort of economic change. |
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In terms of economic damage to Great Britain, the blockade was largely ineffective. |
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These words indicate the importance of economic factors in the launch of Chartism. |
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New tertiary industries such as retail, call centres, offices and media have contributed to a high rate of economic growth. |
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Passenger levels have fluctuated since then, increasing during periods of economic growth and falling during recessions. |
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Economics focuses on the behaviour and interactions of economic agents and how economies work. |
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A common element is the interaction of economic and political influences, broadly described as political economy. |
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Both groups were associated with the rise of economic nationalism and modern capitalism in Europe. |
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Lancashire in the 19th century was a major centre of economic activity, and hence of wealth. |
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The IOC has had to adapt to a variety of economic, political, and technological advancements. |
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Ireland officially entered a recession in 2008 following consecutive months of economic contraction. |
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Economic arguments against free trade criticize the assumptions or conclusions of economic theories. |
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In some ways this effort failed, as the OEEC never grew to be more than an agent of economic cooperation. |
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It worked to reduce the severity of economic austerity, gave independence to India and engaged in the Cold War against Soviet Communism. |
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The general term may cover a variety of forms of economic and social organization. |
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Friedman argued that the demand for money could be described as depending on a small number of economic variables. |
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This neoliberal criticism highlights the ongoing conflict between varying visions of economic development. |
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Significantly lower oil prices could cause a reversal of economic performance as has been the case in past oil shocks. |
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The British military traditionally dominated Gibraltar's economy, with the naval dockyard providing the bulk of economic activity. |
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However, Japan's economy crashed in 1991, creating a long period of economic slump in the country which has become known as The Lost Years. |
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The third axis concerns improving the quality of life in rural areas and encouraging diversification of economic activity. |
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Adherents of this school of economic thought argue that the scale of the problem is much less severe than is popularly supposed. |
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Historically, a great deal of economic literature was concerned with the question of what causes inflation and what effect it has. |
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The issue of economic inequality is relevant to notions of equity, equality of outcome, and equality of opportunity. |
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A major cause of economic inequality within modern market economies is the determination of wages by the market. |
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Economist Simon Kuznets argued that levels of economic inequality are in large part the result of stages of development. |
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British merchants smuggled in many goods and the Continental System was not a powerful weapon of economic war. |
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Despite the general trend of economic expansion, the economic performance of former European colonies varies significantly. |
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The Emir has promoted the idea that Kuwait should focus its energies, in terms of economic development, on the financial industry. |
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However, it has total control of economic resources within its exclusive economic zone as well as those on or under its continental shelf. |
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Its cause has been attributed to a wide array of economic, demographic, cultural, technological, and institutional factors. |
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Papyri preserve complex accounting methods that suggest elements of economic rationalism, and the Empire was highly monetized. |
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In an era of economic rivalry in Europe, Scotland was incapable of protecting itself from the effects of English competition and legislation. |
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It has been argued that Chalmers was both a paternalist, on the moral plane, and a supporter of economic individualism. |
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There are a number of economic advantages for citizens of a country with an open economy. |
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Rather than focusing on punitive expeditions as favoured by his father, the young Prince Henry adopted a strategy of economic blockade. |
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The British moral philosopher John Stuart Mill also came to advocate a form of economic socialism within a liberal context. |
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Another form of decentralised planning is the use of cybernetics, or the use of computers to manage the allocation of economic inputs. |
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In such a situation, the economy reached equilibrium at low levels of economic activity and high unemployment. |
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It diverts capital investment away from the course prescribed by the state of economic wealth and market conditions. |
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Since then, Beijing has often offered its support to Islamabad in the way of economic assistance, but also with no-strings-attached military aid. |
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Nuclear stations are used primarily for base load because of economic considerations. |
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Because of economic downturn, I onhold my dream first and use my lovely office's notebook IBM Thinkpad T60P as my best friend. |
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An ambitious building program was initiated, but realised very slowly because of economic constraints. |
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The port accounts for more than a third of economic activity of the town of Calais. |
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Until 1827, blockades, as part of economic warfare, were always a part of a war. |
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As much as 70 to 80 percent of economic growth is now said to be due to new and better knowledge. |
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Services, especially banking and finance, account for the majority of economic output. |
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The combination of economic and demographic factors led to hunger, housing shortages and a lack of work for young people. |
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Some raiding, however, was necessary to gain initial control of the towns and regions that they developed into centers of economic activities. |
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Systemic forms of preferential marriage may have wider social implications in terms of economic and political organization. |
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Many families Having family on which one can rely is very important in times of economic hardship especially if there are children involved. |
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Another institution key to unifying the German states, the Zollverein, helped to create a larger sense of economic unification. |
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The term globalization is derived from the word globalize, which refers to the emergence of an international network of economic systems. |
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Political institutions thus gave rise to different types of economic systems, which determined the colonial economic performance. |
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Their successful integration into Thai society has allowed for this group to hold positions of economic and political power. |
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One of the fastest growing areas of economic development in Namibia is the growth of wildlife conservancies. |
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Mauritius is ranked high in terms of economic competitiveness, a friendly investment climate, good governance and a free economy. |
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The report's ranking of 183 countries is based on measures of economic openness, regulatory efficiency, rule of law, and competitiveness. |
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Ayutthaya, situated at the southern extremity of the floodplain, thus became the hub of economic activity. |
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Economic diplomacy is the use of foreign aid or other types of economic policy as a means to achieve a diplomatic agenda. |
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The country suffered from slow economic growth and bouts of economic recession. |
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Only in the 1990s with a program of economic liberalization did the economy begin to recover. |
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Many renters retained ties to the estates, diversifying their household's sources of income and level of economic security. |
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These measures failed to achieve their objectives of income redistribution and the end of economic dependence on developed nations. |
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At the time, the administration and governance of port were very supportive of economic growth. |
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Plentiful salmon made parts of the river, such as Celilo Falls, hubs of economic activity for thousands of years. |
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Millions of Nigerians have emigrated at times of economic hardship, primarily to Europe, North America and Australia. |
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The countries of Central America and the Caribbean are at various levels of economic and human development. |
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It began as the Crown granted patents as a form of economic protection to ensure high industrial production. |
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The clause will be enforceable if it involves a genuine attempt to quantify a loss in advance and is a good faith estimate of economic loss. |
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Botswana has a high level of economic freedom compared to other African countries. |
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He made his maiden speech in February 1932 on the subject of economic policy, advocating a cautiously protectionist approach to cheap imports. |
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In recent years, entrepreneurship has been claimed as a major driver of economic growth in both the United States and Western Europe. |
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Capitalist governments have also been criticised as oligarchic in nature due to the inevitable inequality characteristic of economic progress. |
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Up to a point increases in the amount of capital per worker are an important cause of economic output growth. |
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In the development of economic theory the distribution of income was considered to be between labor and the owners of land and capital. |
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In recent decades there have been several Asian countries with high rates of economic growth driven by capital investment. |
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Another major cause of economic growth is the introduction of new products and services and the improvement of existing products. |
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The value of the model is that it predicts the pattern of economic growth once these two rates are specified. |
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He argued a future communist society would allow people to make decisions about their relationships free of economic constraints. |
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Some have argued that no major country has ever successfully industrialized without some form of economic protection. |
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Ore deposits are classified according to various criteria developed via the study of economic geology, or ore genesis. |
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The city and the adjoining Vale of Glamorgan contribute a disproportionately high share of economic output in Wales. |
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Contrary to this concept, Malthus proposed rent to be a kind of economic surplus. |
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The cooperative movement has been fueled globally by ideas of economic democracy. |
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They are mentioned in his flat, textbook voice, alongside schoolroom descriptions of topography and assessments of economic significance. |
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Texas has also started to become an engine of economic growth. |
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The Scandinavian welfare states have historically had low rates of unemployment and high rates of economic productivity. |
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The GDP report profits the broadest barometer of economic performance. |
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Some recent work in the history of economic thought traces Smith's idea back to seventeenth-century Jansenism. |
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In the area of economic hope, look at China, our industry's biggest economic boogyman today. |
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It's the energy and material implications of economic growth, rather than economic growth per se, that is the problem,' Foran says. |
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My remarks have sometimes been interpreted as implying that I am hostile to the mathematization of economic theory. |
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They begin with early mercantilists as a lead up to Adam Smith, where they place the genesis of economic thought. |
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John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern's 1944 Theory of Games and Economic Behavior introduced game theory to the world of economic modeling. |
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Both of these things have helped prevent purchasing motivative from being too focused on price during a time of economic gloom. |
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In a climate of economic hardship and political uncertainty, the needy are growing in numbers and getting needier. |
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Although proponents of economic liberalization condemn India's socialist Nehruvian economic policies, they did alleviate poverty. |
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New Castle has long known the satisfaction of economic stability and steady, manageable growth. |
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More severe consequences are outmigration and depopulation, concentration of economic activities, congestion and pollution. |
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