In advanced disease, hyperinflation and increased radiolucency of the lungs, particularly in the lower lung segments, are evident. |
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Inspiratory muscle weakness due to lung hyperinflation and muscle wasting may occur in cystic fibrosis. |
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Which devastating calamity is to come our way, hyperinflation or collapsing deflation? |
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So far so good, but what about contingency plans to combat inflation, and hyperinflation to boot? |
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Many countries have resorted to printing money and have experienced hyperinflation under those circumstances. |
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If the UK was in a boom and the interest rate was set too low, hyperinflation could take place and lead to economic melt down. |
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Gold also may be helpful during periods of hyperinflation as it can hold its purchasing power much better than paper money during these periods. |
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A mere five years after the end of hyperinflation, the country's economy began to turn down once more. |
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If the central bank chooses to persevere in their inflation, hyperinflation will be unleashed. |
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And remember, on top of this, there is a basic high rate of hyperinflation already built into the system right now. |
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After six years of war, the country suffered from hyperinflation, food shortages, ill-clothed soldiers, and a plundered citizenry. |
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The states' economies began to experience hyperinflation as state governments printed paper money to meet war expenditures. |
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This is the point where the game slips out of the hands of the stabilizers and hyperinflation and depression loom. |
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Patients with severe emphysema had severe airflow obstruction, hyperinflation, and air trapping. |
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Other reasons for sudden death include cardiac dysrhythmias related to hypoxia, hyperinflation leading to air trapping, and tension pneumothorax. |
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Bronchial atresia is a rare, congenital anomaly characterized by the presence of bronchocele with distal hyperinflation. |
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Lessons learned during the days of hyperinflation in the 1970s and 1980s are coming in handy. |
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The hyperinflation may be explained completely by the time constant of the respiratory system exceeding the time available for tidal exhalation. |
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This edema leads to hyperinflation and atelectasis of the lungs, and wheezing. |
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It imposed an economic program that ended hyperinflation and stabilized Bolivia's economy. |
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Here, the clearest policy conclusion is to abandon the dollar peg for good, especially since hyperinflation fears appear unwarranted. |
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This increase was linearly correlated with pulmonary indexes of airflow obstruction and lung hyperinflation. |
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The traditional remedy for inflation in general, and hyperinflation in particular, is gold. |
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When price increases get out of control, inflation is referred to as hyperinflation. |
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Barely 20 years ago, Brazil was a drowsy, underperfoming Third World nation, plagued by hyperinflation and boom-and-bust growth. |
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In addition, Brazil has suffered through periods of hyperinflation and has nationalized assets including some previously owned by us. |
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Lanzer says the government is printing money to avoid financial collapse, risking hyperinflation. |
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He added that people trafficking is often not one of major concerns in a country where memories of terrorism and hyperinflation are still vivid. |
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Some even forecast hyperinflation, fuelled by a reluctance on the part of the Fed to start hiking. |
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Socially, hyperinflation is a ver y destructive phenomenon which has far-reaching consequences for individuals and society as a whole. |
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We cannot allow ourselves to fall into populism, because the consequence is hyperinflation and hyperinflation makes the poor even poorer. |
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The economy was crumbling and hyperinflation meant that even though people were suddenly millionaires, all they could afford was a loaf of bread. |
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In the midst of the economic crisis, the salaries of La Paz city employees eroded significantly owing to hyperinflation of 26,000 per cent. |
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The progress made in controlling inflation, especially hyperinflation, was favourable to poverty reduction. |
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They gave me such bad palpitations and shakes I couldn't actually concentrate on Brazilian hyperinflation or the ritual uses of the cenote in Mayan culture. |
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Once known for hyperinflation and economic booms and busts, Latin America is now a place of sound finances and financial systems. |
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The implications of Iranian hyperinflation for American policy are less clear. |
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Third, the duration of inspiratory effort is difficult to determine in obstructive disease with dynamic hyperinflation, due to a variable degree of neuromuscular uncoupling. |
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Argentina devalued its currency, the peso, and ended its parity with the US dollar, a measure introduced 13 years previously in a successful battle against hyperinflation. |
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Only inconvertible paper currencies can be expanded rapidly without limit to generate hyperinflation. |
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Economists generally believe that high rates of inflation and hyperinflation are caused by an excessive growth of the money supply. |
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Zimbabwe's central bank introduced new higher-value 100 billion Zimbabwe dollar notes on Monday as part of a desperate fight against spiralling hyperinflation, the bank said. |
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Absence of law and security, or hyperinflation, will make it difficult for microfinance providers to operate, although some strong and innovative microfinance providers are able to operate even in challenging circumstances. |
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When hyperinflation peaked, wheelbarrows full of money were required to shop for groceries. |
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This sometimes leads to hyperinflation, a condition where prices can double in a month or less. |
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The worsening economic crisis and hyperinflation reduced his popular support and the Peronist Carlos Menem won the 1989 election. |
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This abundance of specie remonetized the Ming economy, whose paper money had suffered repeated hyperinflation and was no longer trusted. |
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Its unrestricted issuance in the late Yuan dynasty inflicted hyperinflation, which eventually brought the downfall of the dynasty. |
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The country has been in economic decline since the 1990s, experiencing several crashes and hyperinflation along the way. |
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This represented a state of hyperinflation, and the central bank introduced a new 100 billion dollar note. |
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Due to hyperinflation, those hospitals still open were not able to obtain basic drugs and medicines. |
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The breakdown of these services is directly linked to the exponential downturn in the economy and the problem of hyperinflation as well limited access to local and foreign currency. |
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I don't agree with everything you've said. I don't think for a moment that we're at any risk of German-style hyperinflation, but I do agree with you that we have to be concerned about deficits. |
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A currency board was introduced in 1997 after a severe crisis in the national bank system led to hyperinflation, bank closures, acute political crisis and mass impoverishment. |
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These asset values were subsequently revised between 1993 and 1997 as a result of the application of 'revaluation coefficients' issued by the Russian Government to deal with hyperinflation. |
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These triggers came on top of ongoing suffering caused by events of recent years such as hyperinflation, political instability and the collapse of basic social services. |
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Instead of hope, there is, for many Zimbabweans, fear of what an all-powerful Mugabe means for the future of the country, and gloomy prophecies for an economy still fragile after the hyperinflation horrors of five years ago. |
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By the early '20s the project was again close to collapse as German hyperinflation drove costs of production to over 5 billion marks. |
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The immediate general response to this latter problem was to resort to printing money thereby engendering inflation, indeed in some cases, most notably in Argentina and Brazil, hyperinflation. |
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Other factors at play in the worsening of the humanitarian situation are linked to record-high food prices, hyperinflation and drought in many parts of the country. |
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Germany, who built the ECB mirroring its former central bank, has been price-sensitive since a hyperinflation spell in the 1920s put the country's finances out of control. |
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Salaries have no value due to hyperinflation and most workers, including government employees, now report for work once a week as their wages can barely meet the cost of a bus fare. |
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Meanwhile Sterling's potential transfer fee increasingly seems subject to Weimar Republic levels of hyperinflation – from £40m earlier in the week to £60m in one Sunday paper. |
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The hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic of Germany is a notable example. |
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Even though ten years elapsed between the German hyperinflation of 1923 and the seizure of power by Hitler, it is often suggested that the two events are causally related. |
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It shows how dollarization has allowed Zimbabwe to quash hyperinflation, restore stability, increase budgetary discipline, and reestablish monetary credibility. |
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