mass unemployment in Czech

[eko.] masová nezaměstnanost Entry edited by: RNDr. Pavel Piskač

Sentence patterns related to "mass unemployment"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "mass unemployment" from the English - Czech Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "mass unemployment", or refer to the context using the word "mass unemployment" in the English - Czech Dictionary.

1. First, the advent of mass unemployment.

2. The economics of mass-unemployment and international economics interested Meade in particular.

3. THE new Bogof coalition Government (buy one, get one free) is in haste to create mass unemployment,

4. 28 Yes, commodity prices are up — but that's no reason to perpetuate mass unemployment. To paraphrase William Jennings Bryan, we must not crucify our economies upon a cross of rubber.

5. The convergence criteria, which are absolute and sustainable constraints since the adoption of the stability pact, have deprived Europe of the economic recovery which is essential if mass unemployment is to be reduced.

6. As Maurice Allais and clear-headed economists show, the total liberalisation of trade causes competition that pits everyone against everyone else as well as relocations, giving rise to pay restrictions, mass unemployment, and thus a crisis in our economies.

7. Adorkable by Sarra Manning grabbed my heart and And in times of economic hardships and harsh governments , of pointless wars and mass unemployment , there was pop art and there was punk , there was hip hop and and graffiti , there was acid house and riot grrl .

8. It is absolutely clear that those economies which let the second-round effects gallop and had inflation on a lasting basis had both inflation and very low growth, and it was the start, in a large number of economies in Europe, of mass unemployment that we are still fighting and on our way to eliminating.

9. (FR) Mr President, on 5 December, Maurice Allais, the economist and Nobel prizewinner, said that the true origin of the crisis lay with the World Trade Organisation and that reform was required as a matter of urgency, his analysis being that current mass unemployment was due to the wholesale liberalisation of trade - a liberalisation which benefits only the rich.