Well, the U.S., of course, is the world's largest economy. It's about a quarter of the world's output. It's also home to many of the largest financial institutions and financial markets.
The free market economy is supposed to be the only path leading to the happiness of humanity by promoting wealth and prosperity, power and influence of nations.
As discomfiting as it is to both market optimists and policy activists, a certain amount of instability is inherent to the economy.
The thing that makes reading and writing suspect in the eyes of the market economy is that it's not corrupted.
The crisis in Europe has affected the U.S. economy by acting as a drag on our exports, weighing on business and consumer confidence, and pressuring U.S. financial markets and institutions.
An attack on the scale of Sept. 11 would rock the markets and the economy.
China is crippling our manufacturing economy and eliminating our jobs by illegally flooding our markets.
When the economies of emerging markets don't just grow but beat expectations, there's scarcely a mention.
I get to shift multiple markets. I get to shift economies. It's extremely liberating. I breathe differently.
The globalization of the capital market is actually part of economic globalization. This will create a change in the entire world economy, not just restricted to some fields in some countries.
It's a market economy. Apparently the demand for great coaches exceeds the supply, so of course the price of good coaches is going to be high.
Communism brought out the worst in human nature and crippled people's ability or ambition to participate in a market economy.
The best and most sustainable love story for markets is one based on a healthy and dynamic real economy that creates jobs and opportunities for many more people.
You have to manage money. Particularly with market economies. You may have a great product, but if your bottom line goes bust, then that's it.
We see China as a large market opportunity with similar cyclical economic cycles that occur throughout every economy.
I think a major cause of present Asian economic difficulties that mainly come from, you know, lack of market economy.
Investors should be cautiously positioned as the global economy and markets face major uncertainties. The downgrade will be a further headwind to growth and job creation in the U.S.
The challenge as we saw in the Nigerian project was to restructure the economy decisively in the direction of a modern free market as an appropriate environment for cultivation of freedom and democracy and the natural emergence of a new social order.
We know that in our free market economy some will prosper more than others. What we don't accept is the idea that some folks won't even get a chance.
As the economy faces such difficulties, more tough questions need to be asked about what the Tories would do if elected. Their ideology of free markets and small government needs challenging. That has to be part of our job.
If history judges society for how it treats those in need, so markets judge economies by the incentives they provide for private investment, the infrastructure that supports growth, and the burdens placed on job creation.