The answer is that adjusting to the end of the commodity boom, which benefited South America particularly, has taken longer than expected. Between 2003 and 2010 China’s industrialisation boosted demand for minerals, oil and foodstuffs. Commodity prices fell steadily between 2010 and 2015. As export revenue shrank, the region’s currencies weakened, curbing imports and pushing up inflation.
Latin America also faces a fiscal squeeze. The commodity boom temporarily boosted tax revenues. Too many governments spent, rather than invested or saved, this windfall. The primary fiscal deficit (ie, before interest payments) in the region as a whole increased from 0.2% of GDP in 2013 to 2.6% last year. In other words, public debt is rising. Many governments have started to retrench. Few are in a position to prime the pump of recovery.
<span>The border security policy has been revised to try and prevent the drug transport into the country by those of other countries or people that visit other countries. This is called the national southwest border counternarcotics strategy. This also is supposed to reduce the smuggling of weapons and currency and reduce violence.</span>
<span>It has been increasing because there is newly invented medical equipment in the market that is so expensive, and so the GDP also is aligning proportionally to what’s the rate of the equipment. If we will not increase the GDP, invented medical equipment will be useless.</span>
The working conditions were TERRIBLE ! as factories were being built, businesses were in need of workers ! People worked 14-16 hours each day.
Answer: Faust by Goethe
Explanation:
Hello! "Faust" is a two-part classic, wrote by Goethe. The main theme is about a man who makes a pact with the devil; from there topics such as human condition and action, culture and the spiritual are developed. It is a book very recognized by intellectuals.
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