A double-dip recession is still a potential threat that must be avoided at all costs. |
|
Plus, we could well be on our way into a double-dip recession three years from now once the fiscal and monetary stimulus is withdrawn. |
|
Should November's figures show a significant drop, it would suggest that a double-dip recession had become more likely. |
|
The country is in deep recession, yet the government has cut its spending by about 40 percent this year. |
|
As the economic recession abated, its relevance receded in popular culture. |
|
If you stop consumers spending by limiting their credit then recession is inevitable. |
|
So we got out the playbook and quarterbacked our companies into the worst automotive recession in a decade. |
|
Past fiscal decisions are water over the dam, given the national government's priority for addressing recession in a timely manner. |
|
During the early '80s, the United States entered another recession, and Reaganite economics took hold. |
|
With most rates around the world more or less following those of the U.S., Reaganomics also triggered a worldwide recession. |
|
Retiring the torsion bars used previously in 4x4 applications was the key to adding recession in the front suspension. |
|
While demand may pick up as the threat of recession recedes, there are doubts that corporate profitability can soar ahead. |
|
Even media moguls like him are beginning to feel the chill wind of recession. |
|
I led my city out of recession by holding the line on taxes and cutting waste. |
|
The obviously right response to both these failures in a deep recession is the stepping-up of public sector investment to compensate. |
|
He says the economy is in recession after the worst third quarter growth figures in some 50 years. |
|
Even the opposition parties concede that Kim has done a good job in pulling the country out of recession. |
|
Gold is the only mineral commodity which is expected to benefit from the current global economic recession. |
|
The economy is entering its fourth recession in a decade, with no relief in sight. |
|
Figures released this week show US unemployment rising, as recession looms. |
|
|
The country is again sliding into recession at a time when policy makers have few options to revive growth. |
|
In some ways, this recession has not been as hard on low-wage workers as earlier recessions. |
|
If we want to avert a very deep recession it is absolutely vital that these psychological factors are reversed. |
|
The economic impact of the energy crisis has been to aggravate a descent into recession. |
|
So anybody who thinks and counts on this recession ending any time soon, I think, is wrong. |
|
Even when the economy recovers fully from the recession, those revenues won't return. |
|
America in recession would alter the global economic picture and risk a worldwide turndown. |
|
The recession has resulted in unprecedented levels of unemployment and a dramatic increase in poverty. |
|
The lacklustre second-quarter performance has fuelled fears the economy could dip back into recession. |
|
The recession prompted them to re-route planes to North Atlantic routes, causing excess capacity and price wars to fill seats. |
|
With companies retrenching and investment falling, the U.S. is relying on the high-spending habits of consumers to keep recession at bay. |
|
This turned what might have been a short recession into the greatest depression in the nation's history. |
|
Each time the waters swelled and raged through the passage there at the bridge, their recession revealed an altered riverscape. |
|
The Korean won, the Thai baht, and the Indonesian rupiah, lost value rapidly, and major recession hit. |
|
But they may have to be lowered later to prevent the rest of the economy sliding back into recession. |
|
No part of the Silicon Glen across the Central Belt has escaped the recession in the industry, which has hit low-level assembly jobs hardest. |
|
The spreading recession has exposed gaping holes in the safety net for workers and the poor. |
|
Neither was it a Rousseauist abstraction, but a body of angry sans-culottes protesting against the recession and tax increases. |
|
The prince understands that forcing the U.S. into a recession makes Americans buy less gasoline, causing the Saudis to make less money. |
|
The early years were difficult, and the recession of the early 1980s glutted the market with computer chips. |
|
|
I doubt anything much can be done to stop the recession and this will be bad for IT spending. |
|
During a recession, the increase in bankruptcies and the fall in asset prices shrink the asset bases of the banks. |
|
Banks recognize that in a recession, lower interest rates may be necessary to spur growth and prevent bankruptcies. |
|
Certainly, the recent recession has had a serious impact here, but the concert calendar is still bursting at the seams. |
|
For the first three quarters, the market remained limp because of the recession and war. |
|
Had their share of business activity been greater, their increase in thriftiness and prudence might have deepened or prolonged the recession. |
|
To date the US consumer has kept the economy ticking over while the manufacturing sector went into recession. |
|
So a lot of people think that there's always going to be a recession of the ocean before a tidal wave or tsunami hits. |
|
During the 1989-90 recession, for example, there was a torrid need for financial consultants as companies downsized. |
|
But he did not get traction last year in the midst of the worst recession since the Great Depression. |
|
The second choice is that the Federal Reserve creates a recession large enough to turn the trade deficit into a trade surplus. |
|
The apparent mildness of the recession is the best argument against deflation. |
|
Scotland is pinning its hopes on the retail sector to keep it out of a deep recession. |
|
The next recession could transmogrify many dot-com millionaires into poor folks. |
|
The weakest of the major economies, Japan has been mired in recession for most of the last decade. |
|
Meanwhile, the economy is mired in recession, while its traditional locomotive, the export sector, is being derailed by the strong euro. |
|
The combination of the oil shock and Fed actions doomed the US to fifteen months of recession. |
|
He piled on the pounds when his business was hit by the recession and he started binge-eating for comfort. |
|
With the prospect of the tragedy triggering a global recession companies lined up in droves to issue profits warnings and swing the axe. |
|
The good news for hospitals limping along in the recession is the new federal stimulus package could feature money for shovel-ready projects. |
|
|
Although private equity investment in many countries was already shrinking amid fears of a global recession, it has now fallen off a cliff. |
|
Instead, he has been trapped in the money pits of a recession and two wars. |
|
Would an American recession inevitably plunge the rest of the globe into fresh economic turmoil? |
|
But even in unadjusted dollars, the level of tech outlays has recovered all but a smidgen of the losses suffered during the recession. |
|
This trade recession will be just as insidious in its effects as any market blowout. |
|
The dot-com bust, the recession of 2001, and the corporate crime wave and accounting scandals of 2002 brought the party to an unceremonious end. |
|
Is this recession purely cyclical, or are we seeing a repeat of the 1970s, when uncompetitive industries were winnowed out? |
|
In the worst-case scenario, the shuttering of Italy's uncompetitive industry could send unemployment soaring and trigger a long recession. |
|
Many residents began to blame the economic recession on the growing number of undocumented immigrants that poured into the state. |
|
Not only was the business in trouble, but the economy in the UK was in a deep recession. |
|
Pressure on the US dollar in the form of a deep recession or a balance of payments crisis in the US is unlikely. |
|
He failed to cope with the country's economic problems, however, and was unable to prevent the country sliding into an economic recession. |
|
Other will argue that Greenspan prevented the US economy from sliding into recession in the late 90s following the dotcom collapse. |
|
Meanwhile, the economy is sliding rapidly into recession, deflation is worsening, and joblessness is at record levels. |
|
With the slumping global economy squeezing its exports, Japan is sliding into its fourth recession in a decade. |
|
Meanwhile, the 1970s recession and unmanaged racial tensions had led most European countries to adopt an official policy of zero immigration. |
|
They do not foresee the triggers for a crash, namely a sharp rise in interest rates or a dive into recession. |
|
We are currently going through the worst industry recession I have ever known, but there are signs that it's bottoming out. |
|
My mum has also told me about things such as recession, unemployment, and negative equity due to sky-high mortgage rates. |
|
The root cause of this recession was the bursting of one of the biggest financial bubbles in history. |
|
|
If you read the daily newspaper over the past year, you would think that we were involved in a recession, if not outright depression. |
|
In 2001 Krugman was bullish on America as we were slipping into a recession because tax cuts were being advocated as a recession-fighter. |
|
The effect of this revision has been to transform Scotland's regular flirtation with recession into a steady relationship with economic buoyancy. |
|
Bluntly, is the dam bursting and does a really damaging and all-encompassing recession beckon? |
|
The resulting squeeze on profit margins would curb investment, triggering recession. |
|
The President's tax cut was well timed, and along with the automatic stabilizers, helped mitigate the recession. |
|
The entry stair at Yale lies at the bottom of a spatial well, formed by the recession of the blank wall. |
|
The 2001 U.S. recession brought Mexican growth to a halt, and foreign investors have begun moving production to lower cost locations in Asia. |
|
I remember the growth of video recorders through a recession and camcorders through another recession. |
|
An advertising recession coincided with the advent of colour TV, with its high start-up costs for the channel. |
|
During the last recession, however, everyone learned the hard way that prices could fall. |
|
While consumers carried the economy through the recession, execs are now taking the lead in generating growth. |
|
One newspaper headlined their lead story with the recession claims of Davy Stockbrokers. |
|
The hoped-for post-war demand to replace ship losses did not fully materialise due to recession, and many jobs were casual. |
|
The US economy is teetering between recession and growth, and if it sneezes we all catch a cold. |
|
The Italian economy is struggling under a burden of recession, rising inflation, and high government debt. |
|
It's due to a gap in leadership and talent at many agencies, perhaps an outgrowth of a brain drain caused by the last recession. |
|
The recent economic recession has inflicted pain on the once high-flying technology industry. |
|
That has raised fresh concerns over the nation's ability to pull itself out of recession. |
|
The cycle is characterised by a period of growth, then strong growth and then recession. |
|
|
However, the 57-year-old admits that he is concerned about the possibility of a recession hitting Scotland. |
|
The three-year recession and the constant lowering of interest rates to fight it are raising hob with pension funds. |
|
The 2001 recession will be the first in history whose causes and chronology were debated even before the downturn began. |
|
Construction and housebuilding is one industry that can be badly affected by a recession. |
|
More important, what is under way is the first synchronous global recession in a generation. |
|
The increases in both cases peaked after the recession was over, the result of the time it takes to enact and implement taxes. |
|
Maybe the real sales pros are out closing deals left and right, trying to stick a fork in the recession. |
|
In the face of economic recession in the early 1990s, illegal aliens became political scapegoats for all of America's woes. |
|
Sponsorship in a recession is not easy to come by, but he appears to be managing and this piece of good fortune will undoubtedly help. |
|
But the imminent threat of recession was not the economic fundamental he had in mind. |
|
Although consumer confidence has not collapsed it could sink low enough to delay any recovery and ultimately deepen any recession. |
|
The effect was to induce a recession, but it also permanently brought down inflation, and, perhaps as important, inflationary expectations. |
|
First there was the effect of the recession, which began to make itself felt around midsummer. |
|
What's far worse is the phenomenon of the inflationary recession that Keynesians are always trying to foist upon us. |
|
Yet the attack has made such an impact on the anxious and insecure Western elites that there is serious talk of it causing an economic recession. |
|
It is the midst of a recession, and he explains that steel mills are closing down, and there is a lot of job insecurity. |
|
Either the recession is biting harder than I had realised or a lot of people are confused about the boundaries between fact and fiction. |
|
Just a few years ago, economic recession virtually brought Asian film industries to their knees. |
|
It wasn't all plain sailing for the brothers in what was fast becoming a competitive market, and the early 1990s recession hit the business hard. |
|
Since the recession began in March 2001, the labor force has contracted by 1.2 percent. |
|
|
This is the inevitable by-product of implementing a contractionary fiscal policy in the midst of a serious recession. |
|
A brief recovery followed, and then the current recession began in mid-1998, characterized by an unusually long contractionary period. |
|
In the ensuing recession both the stock market and land values plunged to alarmingly low levels, unseen in many years. |
|
A hallmark of the newly christened recession has been a plunge in venture-capital spending. |
|
The recession in the babysitting co-op was real, as real as a recession in any normal economy. |
|
A business that is hit hard during a recession is not unlike a business whose building is flattened by a tornado. |
|
But without countervailing efforts by policymakers, the ebb of recession can sink many boats as well. |
|
As the recession deepened, food stamp and welfare rolls began to rise in most US states. |
|
If there is a crash and the U.S. economy goes into a recession, profits will undoubtedly suffer. |
|
This crime wave happened during a period of economic recession with high inflation and increasing unemployment. |
|
Williams' one worry is that budget politics may put a crimp in the market down the road, especially if there is a prolonged economic recession. |
|
We will undoubtedly recall that just a decade ago, shares did go into free fall, and it did result in a recession of sorts. |
|
Traditionally, such a dramatic Credit crunch would have strangled the economy and precipitated a deep recession. |
|
In a sense, it's also cushioning the impact of recession in the US by keeping imported consumer goods cheap, but only up to the bang, of course. |
|
The crisis has led to a widespread panic about oil shortages that in turn affects the US presidential elections and presages a world recession. |
|
Add the recession of the '80s and the grunge music explosion in Seattle, and the result is Gen X's initial slacker image. |
|
In its November 26 announcement, the National Bureau of Economic Research proclaimed that the recession had begun last March. |
|
They moved to reduce debt and their actions contributed to recession and more price deflation. |
|
A recent shutdown at US docks nearly dragged the region's economies into recession. |
|
It isn't the only big food company to react to the recession by dialing down new product development, which is expensive and risky. |
|
|
Sadly a recession in trade followed and with the old soldiers dying off we couldn't stay open. |
|
And since the last recession, they've gone in different directions all together. |
|
It has diffused a wider lack of confidence on the part of investors and consumers, accentuating the trend towards recession. |
|
Glasgow's restaurants and retail emporia lead the way in beating recession through manic shopping. |
|
The eurozone's largest economy is in recession and looks likely to chalk up its fourth year of sub-par growth. |
|
There's a lot of things that have to be put right because the recession did a lot of damage. |
|
The rapid expansion in 90-92, combined with the recession, did a lot of harm financially, and the company finally went bankrupt. |
|
The trade balance reached equilibrium or surplus only under conditions of deep recession. |
|
It came as a new poll showed that more London firms are now predicting a double-dip recession. |
|
The possibility of a double-dip recession remains, but if most forecasters are right, unemployment should begin to fall. |
|
Despite 11 cuts in interest rates last year, the American economy is poised on the edge of a double-dip recession. |
|
The US is entering uncharted waters, which hide shoals that could cause its economy to sink into a recession and with it stocks and shares plummeting into the deep. |
|
And Little Edie is an iconoclastic character, one that is especially apropos to be revisiting in a time of recession. |
|
But the stridency of these novels is not the most complex or surprising shift in contemporary recession literature. |
|
Besides, a double-dip recession remains a distinct possibility. |
|
The decision to stand pat highlights the lack of coordination between the BOJ and the government to pull the world's second-biggest economy out of recession. |
|
During the recession net immigration to the U.S. from Mexico fell to zero or less. |
|
Laypeople tend to regard two successive quarters of negative growth as a recession. |
|
A weak economy or double-dip recession would be highly negative for both residential and commercial real estate prices, and thus for banks' asset quality. |
|
The tech bubble has burst, the telecom industry is in deep trouble and the economy officially entered recession last year after the longest expansion on record. |
|
|
As the New Year approaches, the UK economy managed to avoid the global recession that has whipped the rest of the major industrial nations this year. |
|
Consumer confidence plummeted and government intervention appeared to have only cosmetic effect as the global economy plunged into deep recession. |
|
The federal deficit has never fallen as fast as it's falling now without a coincident recession. |
|
Because of the economic recession, expect a long turnaround time. |
|
His latest Robert Langdon bestseller has tourists flocking to the Tuscan capital as recession grips Italy. |
|
The biscuit factory closed down its biscuits development section and rode out the recession on old favourites such as custard creams and digestives. |
|
The country largely eschewed the Hooverite policies of the IMF and moved very aggressively to reflate and thereby help to lead the region out of its deep recession. |
|
Say your portfolio is worth a third less than before this recession or crash or perturbation or whatever you want to call it. |
|
One way of answering the question is to look at trendline growth in GDP compared to the anticipated size of any looming recession. |
|
While the domestic business environment has deteriorated because of the protracted recession, there is no excuse for the failure to pay due wages. |
|
Economists warn that the sequester could lead to a recession. |
|
Since the recession, a mercurial job market has made it difficult for many vets to find steady employment. |
|
After the recession of 1921-1922, the country had entered an era of unrestrained economic growth. |
|
Although it is too early to decide, a pretty safe bet instead is that, to a large extent, this increase reflects a normal rebound after a very deep recession. |
|
Almost as soon as Romney ended his day-to-day role at Bain, the dot-com boom crashed and the economy went into recession. |
|
With Europe stuck in a double-dip recession, the United States once again finds itself a prime engine of global growth. |
|
More uncertainty could force a further credit squeeze on an economy that has just entered a double-dip recession. |
|
Yet when the worldwide economy capsized in late 2008, the ripples of recession arrived like a King Tide to the low-lying island. |
|
But the clear signs of a recession herald an end to this development. |
|
The slightest excess tension in the buccinators, too or too much much forward thrust or exaggerated recession of the jaw can prevent a performer from playing well. |
|
|
As a result, we do run a higher risk of a double-dip recession than we did several months ago. |
|
Well, it is nearly impossible for the private sector to not to be the cause of a recession, as the private sector represents the bulk of the economy. |
|
But the global technology recession is culling the ranks of that talent as swiftly as the men in white coats dispose of sheep and cattle on foot-and-mouth infected farms. |
|
Despite an initial rally after today's jobs report, the Dow took another hit, sagging on fears of a double-dip recession. |
|
The country was gripped by recession and interest rates were soaring. |
|
The EU, and particularly the eurozone members of the EU, is at risk of a double-dip recession. |
|
Side effects may include recession, job contraction, 401 bruising, recurrent dow fluctuation, and IRA bleeding. |
|
As recession looms, how much banks increase reserves depends on how bad they think the downturn will be and how many debtors may have trouble repaying their loans. |
|
That ratio represents an improvement from the nadir of the recession, when there were 5.5 job seekers for every vacancy. |
|
We looked at it, and it's just a sine wave, an envelope of minimum and maximum, with the width of the wave showing the time in boom vs. the time in recession. |
|
The would-be rescuer who has become a target of wrath over Wall Street excesses and the ravages of the recession, knows all too well what is driving public anger. |
|
Elizabeth II would probably empathise with a British fashion industry now facing its own annus horribilis as the luxury goods market tailspins into recession. |
|
Beyond money for military and civil defense, Washington should increase general revenue-sharing outlays, so that hard-pressed states don't have to raise taxes in a recession. |
|
It will be a welcome boost after being harshly hit by the double whammy of global recession and the attack in which one of its New York hotels was severely damaged. |
|
We had emerged from a very difficult drought and from a world recession in '83, thanks to the breaking of the drought here and the revival of fortune in the rural industries. |
|
Yet the advent of a swimming mishap, a recession, a war, a tsunami or a bout of pancreatitis can sometimes be the stuff of which revivifications are made. |
|
During the recession and the recovery, fast-food more than held its own because of its sheer cheapness. |
|
Banks in the creditor country may have branches or subsidiaries in the crisis country that lose money due to loan defaults caused by the crisis-induced recession. |
|
But this would, in all likelihood, push the economy into a recession. |
|
It sought to fight a savage recession with increased deficit spending. |
|
|
Obviously, he handled a lot of big items when it comes to the recession. |
|
No major UK economists are predicting a recession round the corner. |
|
Not enough to make the difference between recession and expansion, or between excellent growth and meh growth, to be sure. |
|
The number of children who are poor or near-poor is still higher than it was before the recession. |
|
The welding of the two hot pieces of metal causes the removal of the softer seat metal and subsequent recession of the valve into the cylinder head. |
|
The central bank then has a choice between implementing a contractionary monetary policy to fight inflation and an expansionary policy to fight recession. |
|
The big news story of the day was negative equity, repossession, the loss of white collar jobs and the fear that recession could slide into depression. |
|
Despite the unions being under the whip of recession and economic restructuring, their battle continues, only becoming more clearly international. |
|
And in the midst of a serious recession, the de facto reversal of a program which formed the basis of a national mandate could be political dynamite. |
|
Unsurprisingly, sequoia believes we are at the brink of a serious recession. |
|
Economics departments are not only weathering the recession, they're diversifying their courses to take advantage of it. |
|
The workforce now skews female, and men have been hit harder by the recession, forcing women into the breadwinner role. |
|
I was barely out of the bassinet when the country last experienced a recession. |
|
In 1842 Doppler proved that the colour of a luminous body, like the pitch or note of a sounding body, must be changed by velocity of approach or recession. |
|
The follow-up story is how those who survived both the competitive onslaught, as well as the recession, have adapted. |
|
Before the great recession, Anguilla was a favorite for celebrities who wanted to disappear. |
|
The velocity of recession is proportional to the distance from us. |
|
Or to assume that he believes in the addled and simplistic economics of austerity that would drive the nation back into recession. |
|
The recession means wives are under pressure from their husbands who tell them a sitter is now a luxury they can't afford. |
|
But if one of the major ratings agencies says the U.S. is no longer AAA and a recession looms, what will happen to the U.S. debt? |
|
|
But that deal only lasted a year, as Sen. Harry Reid began the use of pro forma sessions to prevent recession appointments. |
|
The recent decline of the stock market does not necessarily signify the start of a recession. |
|
Even if the modest signs of improvement develop into rising output by the autumn, there is still a strong risk of a relapse into a double-dip recession. |
|
Bush 41, faced with a recession, rising debt and a war, contravened his own body-part-specific campaign pledge and raised taxes. |
|
That said, the possibility of Russia spinning the whole world into recession is really remote. |
|
While contract interest rates have steadily declined through the recession, origination fees on new mortgages have risen. |
|
A shock or recession could send deficits spiraling much higher. |
|
The state was in a deep recession as Duke galvanized a racial backlash. |
|
But drivers complained that the cost of respray, in the middle of a recession, was too great a burden and held a major protest. |
|
While the majority of the pulp and paper industry languishes in the midst of the recession, Paper Mill Rewinding Inc. |
|
Expect to hear about the God Particle, the recession and Fifty Shades Of Grey. |
|
If this turns out to be double-dip recession, then all bets must be off. |
|
Lithia Motors is on the acquisition trail again, after down sizing during the recession when many dealerships struggled. |
|
In spite of a recession, over a billion board feet of raw logs were shipped out of the region. |
|
Employment could have responded more inertially to the 2008-09 recession because employers expected it to be shorter than usual. |
|
The antidepressants she takes cause bruxing and we constantly monitor for wear, recession and abfractions. |
|
The probabilities of recession show some similarities and differences in the business cycles of the 07 countries. |
|
The department store chain hopes to use the cash to shrug off its debt woes and help it to take advantage of opportunities in the recession. |
|
At the time, his blossoming cabinetmaking business had hired two staff but the recession crippled his firm. |
|
Despite the recession, Basrec continued to be busy for thefourth quarter of 2009,' said general manager Didine Saadi. |
|
|
They used the bankers' recession to drive down wages and casualise the labour market. |
|
The spike in unemployment during the last recession rekindled the debate over disincentives from unemployment insurance. |
|
Obviously recession is proving to be a nice little earner for the uppercrust and the banking spivs. |
|
The chief fear among Labour MPs is the possibility of a 'double-dip' recession, closely followed by a Chinese burn from Gordon Brown. |
|
Even global recession has not put a dampener on Britain's chocoholics, reports The Daily Express. |
|
Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd be starting my own business in a recession and that it would be making chopping boards. |
|
Many town centre redevelopment projects are stalled because of the recession. |
|
The latest losing streak is its longest for eight years when markets were rocked by recession fears after the dot-com bubble burst. |
|
Switzerland-based Credit Suisse's private banking unit has opined that a double-dip recession is unlikely. |
|
And its selade millionaire boss Mr David Cockayne says it will continue to expand despite pessimists talking Britain into recession. |
|
However, since the recession of 2008-2009, other companies have been performing stress tests on their financial statements. |
|
And so the deficit can swell very rapidly during a recession. |
|
A study focused on individuals in various geographic subregions of the country during the economic recession. |
|
The mild local recession impacts also can be attributed to other noncyclic components of the economic base. |
|
Di Giovanni appeared in the 2012 December Journal, which sought to correlate polar cap recession rate with solar activity. |
|
Making the recent stock carnage a non-issue, the bank said that the threat of a global recession is low. |
|
We always seem to be on the precipice of falling back into recession. |
|
Though the industry nosedived during the recession, it's now making a comeback. |
|
He ornaments the middle distance with, instead of verdure, olive-coloured nymphs, nudely piping in the watery recession. |
|
She said the recession and the soaring elderly population mean more people want to work longer. |
|
|
Economic forces converged to bring the country out of a recession. |
|
Economists worry that deflation will bring the country into recession. |
|
Many economists believe that trying to spend your way out of a recession is bad medicine. |
|
The recession is bodyslamming Corporate America in a new and troubling way. |
|
Fire departments across the country have been forced to rely on rolling brownouts because of the recession. |
|
Once you cut through all the econobabble, it says we're headed for a recession. |
|
Despite this, the employment situation in York remained fairly buoyant until the effects of the late 2000s recession began to be felt. |
|
In contrast to Norway, Sweden had substantially higher actual and projected unemployment numbers as a result of the recession. |
|
The global economic recession of 2008 had a significant impact on the Royal Navy. |
|
The UK economy was deep in recession by this stage and remained so until the end of the year. |
|
Progress in developing the area was inhibited by the 2008 recession and by new guidelines governing flood protection. |
|
In order to ease the large budget deficit which had accumulated due to the recession, the coalition made deep spending cuts. |
|
An economic recession, depression, or financial crisis could eventually lead to a stock market crash. |
|
The European economy was dependent on gold and silver currency, but low domestic supplies had plunged much of Europe into a recession. |
|
Surfaces are highly decorated with intricate patterning, with no attempt to give an impression of depth, volume or recession. |
|
In 2008 and 2009, Honda, BMW, and Toyota all withdrew from Formula One racing within the space of a year, blaming the economic recession. |
|
The early 1980s also saw a significant decline in league attendances as a result of the recession and the ongoing problem of hooliganism. |
|
Ireland officially entered a recession in 2008 following consecutive months of economic contraction. |
|
The country officially exited recession in 2010, assisted by a strong growth in exports. |
|
Although the recession reached its trough in June 2009, voters remained frustrated with the slow pace of the economic recovery. |
|
|
Between June 2007 and November 2008 the global recession led to falling asset prices around the world. |
|
In the 1874 general election Gladstone was defeated by the Conservatives under Disraeli during a sharp economic recession. |
|
The industrial areas spent the rest of the 1920s in recession, and these industries received little investment or modernisation. |
|
Mr. Finkel speculated that the recession could amplify the fallout from monetary mismatchings. |
|
Once this massive credit crunch hit, it didn't take long before we were in a recession. |
|
The recession, in turn, deepened the credit crunch as demand and employment fell, and credit losses of financial institutions surged. |
|
Several commentators have suggested that if the liquidity crisis continues, an extended recession or worse could occur. |
|
Investment bank UBS stated on October 6 that 2008 would see a clear global recession, with recovery unlikely for at least two years. |
|
Stabilization policy attempts to stimulate an economy out of recession or constrain the money supply to prevent excessive inflation. |
|
The global recession that followed resulted in a sharp drop in international trade, rising unemployment and slumping commodity prices. |
|
The recession has renewed interest in Keynesian economic ideas on how to combat recessionary conditions. |
|
The financial crisis and the recession have been described as a symptom of another, deeper crisis by a number of economists. |
|
As late as 2014, and early 2015, a majority of Americans still believed that the nation remained in a recession. |
|
During the 19th century, Brittany remained in economic recession, and many Bretons emigrated to other French regions, particularly to Paris. |
|
In 1985, the economy had been out of recession for three years, but unemployment remained stubbornly high. |
|
The recession had a severe effect on financial institutions such as savings and loans and banks. |
|
The recession came at a particularly bad time for banks because of a recent wave of deregulation. |
|
The American banking system had been significantly weakened by the severe recession and the effects of deregulation. |
|
The recession also significantly exacerbated a crisis in the savings and loan industry. |
|
Although the slate industry partly recovered from the recession of the 1890s, it never fully recovered. |
|