Search Results | Showing 1271 - 1280 of 1883 results for "GDP" |
| | | ... countries have barely started the deleveraging process for their economies, particularly in Europe where the total debt to GDP ratio in Europe had not changed since the start of the global financial crisis. "The crisis hasn't even started and will take ... |
| | | | ... this exactly what China wants -- to slow the economy to a more sustainable growth rate? Only recently, it downshifted its GDP growth target to 7.5% from 8.0%. Let me repeat my favourite phrase, what China wants, China gets. As an aside, do your sums ... |
| | | | ... Group, which it commissioned, that claimed the rise in the SG rate to 12% would lead to a 0.33 per cent increase in (real) GDP by 2025. The Financial Services Council (FSC) also welcomed the outcome, saying the higher rate of savings would reduce Australia's ... |
| | | | ... that inflation has moderated." And get this, Stevens stressed that even if Chinese growth slows to 7.5% as targeted, "Chinese GDP will equal that of the United States, in purchasing-power parity terms, in about a decade. It will exceed that of the euro ... |
| | | | ... higher-than-expected 0.7% in January - the largest since October. Increased inventories provide a positive contribution to GDP growth but more than this it indicates that businesses are expecting better sales going forward. Every little thing helps but ... |
| | | | ... Australia. It's coming just when our economic scorecard is not doing that flash. Yes, you've already seen this last week. Real GDP slowed to just 0.4% in the fourth quarter (half of the 0.8% growth in the previous quarter), taking the annual growth rate ... |
| | | | ... into new bonds with a 53.5% haircut. Bloomberg says, it's about 85%. Now Greece is on its way to turning that 160% debt-to-GDP ratio into something around 120% by 2020. At least, it'll be wishing and hoping and praying. Or will it the rest of us that'll ... |
| | | | ... fronts, with negative offshore leads, concerns about Greece's debt woes and disappointing Australian gross domestic product (GDP) figures all weighing on the bourse. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 61 points, or 1.45 per cent, at 4,143.7 points ... |
| | | | ... markets overnight. He said there were fears that future growth in the European economy looked doubtful following the release of GDP (gross domestic product) figures for the euro zone overnight. There was also heightened uncertainty ahead of Thursday's ... |
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