Sentence examples for burgeoning inequality from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

It also means addressing the elephant in the room: burgeoning inequality.

In all of these cases, the causal mechanism is the same: Unregulated capitalism generates both rapid growth and burgeoning inequality.

Rather, decades of burgeoning inequality – of the Davos set scooping more and more of the gains from growth – have enabled the super-rich to pretend that their narrow sectional interests are what's good for the world economy.

Similar(57)

In terms of sexual mores, business trends and burgeoning social inequality, Guangdong is ahead of the curve.

Nation state-based liberal democracy is poorly equipped to deal with deleterious side effects of present-day globalization such as ozone depletion or burgeoning material inequality.

The failure to stem burgeoning social inequalities within and between nations, in health and beyond, has been on the radar for many of us within the human rights movement for quite a while.

Instead of boosting financial assistance to developing countries – at the time of the worst global refugee crisis since the Second World War, burgeoning levels of inequality, and the hottest year on record – we're seeing foreign aid stagnate as a whole, and serious cuts in a number of traditional donors.

These are solid measures, but I would add spending on essentials like food (there is nothing like food insecurity to spur agita), income inequality and burgeoning Internet usage (because the Internet has been crucial to the organization of recent uprisings).

Indeed, the UK's only partner in crime is the US, which must lead one to question how successful the Anglo-Saxon economic model can ever be at tackling entrenched inequality and burgeoning discontent.

Xi and Li's main challenges are a misfiring economy overly dominated by powerful state industries and mounting public anger over widespread corruption, a burgeoning income gap and social inequality.

If the 1990s were largely dominated by the good aspects of globalisation – faster growth, a narrowing of the gap between rich and poor countries, more rapid communications, cheaper goods – the 2000s have exposed a darker side: financial instability, growing inequality within countries, burgeoning corporate power and the rise of the surveillance state.

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