The problem may be even more intense in Los Angeles and Chicago, whose economies continue to lag further behind.
Military relations have lagged behind other aspects of the engagement between the U.S. and China, whose economies are deeply entwined.
Countries whose economies are growing quickly don't necessarily produce handsome stock returns.
These are two conjoined cities whose economies depend on the imbalances created by the national border than runs along the river that marks the border.
And there is no guarantee that a deal which suits countries whose economies really are developing, such as Mexico or Brazil, will find favour with those that bear the label "developing" but in reality are anything but.
The issue of climate change is something that we are working diligently on and everybody has a huge interest in this, no place more so than Alaska where the effects are already beginning to be felt and it's starting to change I think the ability of native peoples to -- whose economies oftentimes may be based on interacting with the natural environment there.
If oil prices continue to rise, analysts worry it will hurt developing economies whose growth has helped buoy Western economies struggling with tepid growth and the threat of recession.
The report argues that there is little reason why London and other British cities should not be given the same kind of decentralised power as Scotland and Wales, whose combined economies were half the size of the capital's.
What I see is a bunch of economies whose citizens are making less money than before.
The slide has unnerved policymakers in economies whose currencies are rising (see article), notably Brazil, where a 2% tax on foreign capital inflows has been imposed.
ECONOMIST: Why it��s unlikely to turn into a dangerous collapse
Another is the growing heft of emerging economies, whose central banks put a bigger chunk of reserves into deposits than do their counterparts in developed countries.
The head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Christine Lagarde said emerging economies - whose growth helped support the world economy during the global crisis - are starting to be affected by weaknesses in the advanced economies.
Lord Heseltine, whose plans to improve the economies of English cities other than London were accepted by the government this month, was asked by the Independent if it was essential to improve the economy.
Mostly, though, the speech laid out the humdrum economies of a man whose ambitions ran to political advancement, not wealth.
But there's a big part of the world whose fate has been divorced from the major economies for too long.
Yet these are also the products whose orders are the first to be cancelled when economies slow and companies trim investment.
ECONOMIST: The fabled Mittelstand is feeling the pinch more than most
"Markets are now focusing on potential weaknesses in euro-zone states whose banking sectors are very large relative to their economies, " said Christian Schulz, an economist at Berenberg Bank in London.
Otherwise, economies are always in balance given the simple truth that economies are nothing but a collection of individuals whose trade balances, by definition.
The quest is by men and women trying to understand whether economies will grow and, if so, why and to whose benefit.
The summit will also be used to assess the European semester, a six-month cycle of scrutiny of the economies of EU countries, resulting in the publication of country-specific guidance to countries whose policies and budgets are out of line.
He is, though, likely to hear from his hosts about the market's control over the price of the dollar, to which oil producers in the region peg their currencies, and whose 30% trade-weighted decline in the past five years is putting inflationary pressure on domestic economies.
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