short run adjustments in Vietnamese

@Short run adjustments
- (Econ) Những điều chỉnh giá ngắn hạn.

Sentence patterns related to "short run adjustments"

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

1. Short-run exchange-rate adjustments simply cannot fix negative long-term trends.

2. We run short of tea.

3. We've run short of oil.

4. They've run short of fuel.

5. We've run short of milk.

6. Short-term fuel trim refers to dynamic or instantaneous adjustments.

7. They had run short of fuel.

8. I have run short of money.

9. We have run short of candles.

10. (Opens a modal) ElAsticity in the long run and short run

11. Even a short-term illness calls for adjustments, concessions, and sacrifices.

12. As a result, increased trade may demand difficult adjustments in the short term.

13. Supply is more elastic in the long run than in the short run, for two reasons.

Cung co giãn hơn trong dài hạn so với trong ngắn hạn, vì hai lý do.

14. Recent adjustments in the pension system have largely been ad hoc and short-term.

15. Supply of the grain has run short during the drought.

16. No learner has ever run short of subjects to explore.

17. The short-run aggregate supply curve is therefore upward sloping.

18. I am sorry we have run short loose leaf notebook.

19. Aggregate demand and short-run aggregate supply price level AS

20. Aggregate supply and the price level in the short run

21. The short-run aggregate supply curve, therefore, is upward sloping.

22. On land they can run in short, very fast bursts.

23. Let us know if you run short of money [ anything ].

24. ‘short-term fuel trim’ refers to dynamic or instantaneous adjustments to the base fuel schedule;

25. Long-run own-price and cross-price elasticities are larger in absolute terms than short-run elasticities.