How to Use macroeconomics in a Sentence

macroeconomics

noun
  • Of course, the crypto markets are not just driven by macroeconomics.
    Declan Harty, Fortune, 17 Mar. 2022
  • As long as that gap persists, banks are acting more as a gauge on broad macroeconomics instead of true investor belief in the industry.
    David Benoit, WSJ, 18 May 2021
  • As anyone with a macroeconomics 1.01 course under their belt will tell you, a decrease in supply matched with a growth in demand will lead to an inevitable increase in price.
    Alexander Puutio, Forbes, 29 Oct. 2021
  • There is a clear lack of racial diversity amongst the eight members, who are experts in macroeconomics and business cycle research.
    Nicole Goodkind, CNN, 30 June 2022
  • But there was an unexpected addition to my pod: John Maynard Keynes, the father of macroeconomics.
    New York Times, 25 May 2021
  • The field of macroeconomics has come under heat recently thanks to what some see as a disconnect between macro models and reality.
    Daniel Tenreiro, National Review, 23 Feb. 2021
  • Even before the war, more than half of the world’s poorest countries were in debt distress or close to it, said Marcello Estevão, the World Bank’s global director for macroeconomics, trade, and investments.
    Nate Dicamillo, Quartz, 5 Apr. 2022
  • In my opinion, this is about macroeconomics versus microeconomics.
    Expert Panel®, Forbes, 17 May 2021
  • Most of the benefits of economics for entrepreneurs comes from microeconomics, the study of particular markets, rather than macroeconomics, the study of business cycles.
    Bill Conerly, Forbes, 19 June 2021
  • For anyone interested in Russian macroeconomics, its energy business, and the global pressures of a post-fossil fuels world, the Mirtchev book is a must-read and a go-to volume to have handy on the office bookshelf.
    Kenneth Rapoza, Forbes, 4 May 2022
  • So, macroeconomics is about the economy as a whole, so not a particular sector or a particular market, but the whole economy.
    James Brown, USA TODAY, 24 Apr. 2022
  • Economist Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon macroeconomics predicts the Fed will begin tapering its bond purchases during the first half of next year.
    Paul Davidson, USA TODAY, 23 Feb. 2021
  • On the macroeconomics side, some sectors are more sensitive to business cycles (commodities, for example) and others are less sensitive (health care).
    Bill Conerly, Forbes, 19 May 2022
  • Her expertise is in macroeconomics and the mechanisms of unemployment.
    Cnn Editorial Research, CNN, 26 July 2021
  • The answer usually involves the difference between microeconomics and macroeconomics or, more simply, gross versus net jobs.
    Michael Lynch, Forbes, 6 Apr. 2021
  • At the same time, many governments around the world introduced economic policies—in the areas of macroeconomics, trade, and investment (including semiconductor and health care production)—both prior to and during the pandemic.
    Harry G. Broadman, Forbes, 1 Oct. 2021
  • This, in turn, results in companies raising prices for their goods to offset higher labor costs, spiraling inflation further upwards—something referred to in macroeconomics as a wage-price spiral.
    Sophie Mellor, Fortune, 24 June 2022
  • But then the course broadened into macroeconomics, providing a broad overview after a decade plagued by recessions, gas shortages, runaway inflation, and high unemployment.
    BostonGlobe.com, 7 June 2021
  • People like me, i.e. people who write things about culture, have been bemoaning the decline of the humanities among college majors for decades, even as the causes of that decline — macroeconomics, a popular major — have only accelerated.
    Los Angeles Times, 14 Apr. 2021
  • Though its approach to geopolitics is adventurous, its approach to macroeconomics is deeply conservative.
    The Economist, 1 Mar. 2018
  • So macroeconomics rolls into fiscal and monetary policy to stabilize the economy.
    Bill Conerly, Forbes, 19 May 2022
  • The opening credits in episodes following the pilot allude to a collision between micro- and macroeconomics—the ways in which money was literally shaping the country and encouraging a new national identity of aspiration.
    Sophie Gilbert, The Atlantic, 27 Jan. 2022
  • Political advisers may already be wisely urging the White House not to address such a consequential personal decision with appeals to macroeconomics.
    James Freeman, WSJ, 11 July 2022
  • Indeed, this represents a dramatic repudiation of the macroeconomics consensus since the early 1970s.
    John H. Cochrane, National Review, 9 Mar. 2021
  • The pandemic has helped to contribute to an intellectual revolution in macroeconomics.
    The Economist, 1 Apr. 2021
  • John Cochrane is an economist, specializing in financial economics and macroeconomics.
    Andrew Stuttaford, National Review, 24 Nov. 2020
  • Inflation is both the result of total spending running ahead of the economy’s capacity to supply goods and services (macroeconomics), and idiosyncratic behavior in one industry or another (microeconomics).
    Greg Ip, WSJ, 12 Jan. 2022
  • Some Republicans suggested at the hearing that Dr. Cook lacked sufficient experience in macroeconomics and monetary policy.
    Andrew Ackerman, WSJ, 3 Feb. 2022
  • West’s insistence that this country can’t understand the global mathematics of capitalism-fueled inequality without the calculus of macroeconomics is ultimately spot-on ...
    Michael Harriot, The Root, 19 Dec. 2017
  • Cook is among the country’s more preeminent economists and teaches at Michigan State University, with a focus on macroeconomics, economic history, international finance and innovation.
    Washington Post, 5 Jan. 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'macroeconomics.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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