permacrisis
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈpɜː(ɹ)məˌkɹaɪsɪs/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
Noun
permacrisis (plural permacrises)
- A permanent crisis, one that continually drags on.
- 1994, John Zysman, “Korean Choices and Patterns of Advanced Country Development”, in Lee-Jay Cho, Yoon Hyung Kim, editors, Korea's Political Economy: An Institutional Perspective, Routledge, published 2018, page 170:
- Europe 1992 must be understood as an effort by European governments and business elites to meet the permacrisis of slowed growth and higher levels of unemployment; respond to the changing American and Japanese capabilities; and promote their collective position in the international order.
- 1998, Manuel Castells, End of Millennium, 2nd edition, Wiley-Blackwell, published 2010, pages 7–8:
- Agriculture continued to be in permacrisis, and shortages of consumer goods were customary, but exports of energy and materials, at least until 1986, were providing a hard currency cushion for remedial imports, so that the living conditions of Soviet citizens were better, not worse, in the mid-1980s than a decade earlier.
Related terms
- critical
- multicrisis (adj)
- polycrisis
See also
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