Questão 58746fef-d7
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In the title of the article, the word nigh
In the title of the article, the word nigh
The Boom Is Nigh
Why the coming recovery will hurt like hell.
By Gregg Easterbrook
Home prices keep falling, but productivity is rising fast. GDP
grew 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter, yet unemployment remains
stubbornly high. Inflation is nonexistent, while the consumer
confidence index just rose to 55.9 from 53.6—whatever that
means. Can’t make sense of these economic indicators? Don’t worry,
because nobody else can, either.
Here is what you really need to know: a Sonic Boom is coming. It
will be caused by globalization. And while globalization may be driving
you crazy, it’s just getting started. Thirty years ago, Shenzhen, China,
did not exist; today, it has nearly 9 million residents, roughly the same as
New York City. In a single generation, it has grown from a village of tarpaper shacks into an important urban center. It has become the world’s
fourth-busiest port, busier than Los Angeles and Long Beach combined.
Never before has a great city been built so fast, nor a productive economy established from so little.
The international recession that began in 2008 has made the Sonic
Boom quieter, but history shows that when a crisis ends, the larger trends
in place before the crisis usually resume. Shenzhen represents the larger
trend of growth, change, and transformation at unprecedented velocity.
Thanks to vast increases in productivity, worldwide economic growth
soon will pick up, creating rising prosperity and higher living standards for
most people in most nations. The world will be far more interconnected,
leading to better and more affordable products, as well as ever better
communication among nations.
But there’s a big catch: just as favorable economic and social trends
are likely to resume, many problems that have characterized recent
decades are likely to get worse, too. Job instability, economic insecurity,
a sense of turmoil, the fear that even when things seem good a hammer is
about to fall—these are also part of the larger trend. As world economies
become ever more linked by computers, job stress will become a 24/7
affair. Frequent shakeups in industries will cause increasing uncertainty.
The horizon has never been brighter, but we may not feel particularly
happy about it.
www.newsweek.com
The Boom Is Nigh
Why the coming recovery will hurt like hell.
By Gregg Easterbrook
Home prices keep falling, but productivity is rising fast. GDP
grew 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter, yet unemployment remains
stubbornly high. Inflation is nonexistent, while the consumer
confidence index just rose to 55.9 from 53.6—whatever that
means. Can’t make sense of these economic indicators? Don’t worry,
because nobody else can, either.
Here is what you really need to know: a Sonic Boom is coming. It will be caused by globalization. And while globalization may be driving you crazy, it’s just getting started. Thirty years ago, Shenzhen, China, did not exist; today, it has nearly 9 million residents, roughly the same as New York City. In a single generation, it has grown from a village of tarpaper shacks into an important urban center. It has become the world’s fourth-busiest port, busier than Los Angeles and Long Beach combined. Never before has a great city been built so fast, nor a productive economy established from so little.
The international recession that began in 2008 has made the Sonic Boom quieter, but history shows that when a crisis ends, the larger trends in place before the crisis usually resume. Shenzhen represents the larger trend of growth, change, and transformation at unprecedented velocity. Thanks to vast increases in productivity, worldwide economic growth soon will pick up, creating rising prosperity and higher living standards for most people in most nations. The world will be far more interconnected, leading to better and more affordable products, as well as ever better communication among nations.
But there’s a big catch: just as favorable economic and social trends are likely to resume, many problems that have characterized recent decades are likely to get worse, too. Job instability, economic insecurity, a sense of turmoil, the fear that even when things seem good a hammer is about to fall—these are also part of the larger trend. As world economies become ever more linked by computers, job stress will become a 24/7 affair. Frequent shakeups in industries will cause increasing uncertainty. The horizon has never been brighter, but we may not feel particularly happy about it.
Here is what you really need to know: a Sonic Boom is coming. It will be caused by globalization. And while globalization may be driving you crazy, it’s just getting started. Thirty years ago, Shenzhen, China, did not exist; today, it has nearly 9 million residents, roughly the same as New York City. In a single generation, it has grown from a village of tarpaper shacks into an important urban center. It has become the world’s fourth-busiest port, busier than Los Angeles and Long Beach combined. Never before has a great city been built so fast, nor a productive economy established from so little.
The international recession that began in 2008 has made the Sonic Boom quieter, but history shows that when a crisis ends, the larger trends in place before the crisis usually resume. Shenzhen represents the larger trend of growth, change, and transformation at unprecedented velocity. Thanks to vast increases in productivity, worldwide economic growth soon will pick up, creating rising prosperity and higher living standards for most people in most nations. The world will be far more interconnected, leading to better and more affordable products, as well as ever better communication among nations.
But there’s a big catch: just as favorable economic and social trends are likely to resume, many problems that have characterized recent decades are likely to get worse, too. Job instability, economic insecurity, a sense of turmoil, the fear that even when things seem good a hammer is about to fall—these are also part of the larger trend. As world economies become ever more linked by computers, job stress will become a 24/7 affair. Frequent shakeups in industries will cause increasing uncertainty. The horizon has never been brighter, but we may not feel particularly happy about it.
www.newsweek.com
A
is an adjective meaning “nocturnal”.
B
is an adverb meaning “near”.
C
is an adjective meaning “up”.
D
is a noun meaning “recovery”.
E
is a verb meaning “coming”.