Hints and tips:
...Ann-Katrin Petersen at the BlackRock Investment Institute said inflation was likely to remain sticky enough to avoid a return to the negative rates the ECB had in place two years ago....
...“There’s so much shipping capacity coming on stream that in the long run the increase in rates evens out,” says Ryan Petersen, chief executive of the freight forwarding and logistics company Flexport....
...Petersen actually went bankrupt as a result....
...Petersen said: “We haven’t learned anything....
...In 2010, in a case brought by German dentist Domnica Petersen, the European Court of Justice ruled that an age limit of 68 for dentists in the German health service could be justified....
...Expansion in goods trade relative to overall gross domestic product stalled and then fell after 2008....
...Nowhere more so than in the region’s economic engine, Germany, where automakers contribute sizeable chunks to gross domestic product growth....
...The authorities are all too well aware of that — its economy plunged into recession last year during the pandemic, with gross domestic product contracting 5.4 per cent in 2020....
...“We are expressing the freedom to see, read, and look, at what we want to,” Lee Petersen, Cinema Village manager, told the audience to applause as he welcomed the crowd to the 3:05pm show, one of six screenings...
...In the first quarter of this year the Office for National Statistics estimated that gross domestic product was 3.9 per cent lower than in the first quarter of 2008 before the financial whirlwind struck....
...The survey, watched as an indicator of the likely path for official gross domestic product data, has been stuck in sub-50.0 contractionary territory since January 2012....
...A hundred years ago, Argentina was one of the world’s richest countries, with a gross domestic product per capita comparable with those of Germany or France....
...years, equivalent to about 45 per cent of European gross domestic product....
...“It’s a problem currently under public debate,” Petersen admits....
...Nicholas Lardy, of the Petersen Institute in Washington, said some US economists agreed with this reasoning, concluding that “these were paper losses without any economic consequences”....
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