stagflation in English

noun
1
persistent high inflation combined with high unemployment and stagnant demand in a country's economy.
The result was stagflation ; tighter monetary policy that did not reduce inflation, but it did lead to a small recession that increased unemployment.

Use "stagflation" in a sentence

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

1. Stagflation can be a harbinger of economic depression.

2. 9 Stagflation is a portmanteau word made of stagnation and inflation.

3. This will be difficult to do in a period of stagflation.

4. I am afraid the world is entering another decade of stagflation.

5. 7 Stagflation is portmanteau word made of stagnation and inflation.

6. Operation, control positions in order to tap the main varieties of stagflation.

7. Inflation, unemployment, on both i . e . stagflation, are manifestations of business cycles.

8. Raising the Yuan against the Dollar will cure the stagflation disease of the skin, but hawkish fiscal and monetary policy will cure the stagflation disease of the heart.

9. Stagflation is a very unpopular buzz word in the business world.

10. Substantive state of stagflation will also return to the Russian economy dollarization.

11. Most of the downtown bread stores have been driven out of business by stagflation.

12. Ignore the stock market rally, the world is heading a long stretch of stagflation.

13. A supply shock can cause stagflation due to a combination of rising prices and falling output.

14. This is worth bearing in mind for those who drone on endlessly about "jobless stagflation."

15. There is a real risk of a period of stagflation following the present recession in the industrialized countries.

16. Another from the Pandora's box came out of the Devil, is a global stagflation comes face.

17. The era of stagflation in America began in 1974 and ended in the early 80 s.

18. Stagflation and the threat of deeper world recession has left marks upon the consciousness of the workers.

19. This stilted and challenging environment, which came to be called stAgflation, eventually drove the more perceptive people into gold and silver.

20. In particular, an adverse shock to aggregate supply, such as an increase in oil prices, can give rise to stagflation.

21. 8 The unwillingness of oil-consuming societies to check their spending resulted in the phenomenon of stagflation: slow growth combined with inflation.

22. This stilted and challenging environment, which came to be called stAgflation, eventually drove the more perceptive people into gold and silver.

23. In the resource scarcity scenario (Zinam 1982), stagflation results when economic growth is inhibited by a restricted supply of raw materials.

24. The unwillingness of oil-consuming societies to check their spending resulted in the phenomenon of stagflation: slow growth combined with inflation.

25. The stagflation broke the stabilization in 1970s, the Monetary School, the Supply-Side School and other schools follow the need of ages and become flourishing.

26. We do not curb energy demand, the result is the next higher energy prices, the economic consequences of a sustained cost-push inflation or even stagflation.

27. However, it did not prevent the stagflation of the 1970s, which is considered to have been precipitated by the supply shock caused by the 1973 oil crisis.

28. When mergers and acquisitions are no longer politically feasible (governments clamp down with anti-monopoly rules), stagflation is used as an alternative to have higher relative profit than the competition.

29. If there isn't a recovery from the present situation, because the developing countries would be the least equipped to cope with the effects of the stagflation and what it might do to them.

30. Political economists Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler have proposed an explanation of stagflation as part of a theory they call differential accumulation, which says firms seek to beat the average profit and capitalisation rather than maximise.

31. Ray Dalio: I can say with absolute certainty that if you look at the liquidity base in the corporations and the world as a whole, that there's such reduced level of liquidity that you can't return to an era of stagflation."