Analysis
in sentence
1393 examples of Analysis in a sentence
Soon after the September 11 attacks, NATO established a “terrorism threat intelligence unit” to bolster its intelligence pooling and
analysis
efforts.
Its importance was exposed only by
analysis
of the key roles played by structured investment vehicles (SIVs) and money-market funds (MMFs) in the 2008 meltdown.
Dictatorships and other seemingly omnipotent forms of authoritarianism may look like large, top-down structures, but in the final analysis, they are merely the outcome of ordinary individuals’ beliefs and choices.
The report, based on
analysis
from various international organizations, highlights several areas of concern.
US Intelligence, Inc.SINGAPORE – Among the stories and rumors prompted by Edward J. Snowden’s leaking of classified material – whistleblowing or treason, depending on where you stand – the revelations that may actually lead to a policy change concern the extent to which private companies now carry out intelligence gathering and
analysis
in the United States.
Engagement of such actors in
analysis
evokes the second concern about PMSCs.
Top-level intelligence
analysis
is intended to shape strategic policy.
The bottom line is that the complexity and distinctiveness of China’s economy mean that assessing its current state and performance requires a detail-oriented
analysis
that accounts for as many offsetting factors as possible.
I remember a similar
analysis
in 2000, when experts tried to equate Putin’s KGB background with US President George H.W. Bush’s years as Director of the CIA.
So, yes, Trump just might get his growth number, especially if he finds a way to normalize economic policymaking (which is highly uncertain for a president who seems to prefer tweet storms to patient policy analysis).
Like many ordinary people, they firmly believe that "in the last analysis," the mechanisms explained by their pet theories will prove to be most decisive and relevant.
Indeed, the two combine to produce a neatly perverse analysis: globalization is bad because it gives our race’s jobs to other races in developing nations.
Since 2011, the ECB’s
analysis
of weak eurozone growth has stressed the negative impact of an impaired and fragmented financial system, with high sovereign-bond yields and funding costs for banks resulting in prohibitive lending terms in the peripheral countries.
But if the mark of a rational person is a capacity to act on reasons transcending cost-benefit analysis, how can our rational duty be deduced impartially, free of the influence of personal interests or prejudices?
An effective reform strategy should employ the tools of science – specifically, data collection and
analysis.
The Russian government’s assault on independent media has all but prohibited the kind of deep
analysis
and investigative reporting that is essential to a functioning democracy.
After all, much of the Washington Consensus cannot be deduced from proper economic
analysis.
Even in areas where the empirical record appears clear, closer
analysis
reveals major flaws.
Based on its
analysis
of Ukraine’s “Orange Revolution” as a foreign-backed “NGO revolution,” Russia has also been quietly building its own network of Russia-friendly NGOs in Ukraine since 2004.
It is a powerful
analysis.
If we misdiagnose the problem with a flawed or rushed analysis, our response will be ineffective, and probably even counterproductive.
To put it bluntly, insightful
analysis
has its uses, but change will not happen without a widespread social and political convergence around shared values and objectives – something that is sorely missing in many countries today.
The engagement aspect of the inclusive-growth mission may seem a bit nebulous, especially next to concrete
analysis.
Part of the problem is that when governments invest in economic analysis, they tend to do so for one policy at a time, asking simply: would this be cost-effective?
So, when the education economists provided an
analysis
on putting children into classes according to ability, the eminent panel would question the assumptions and probe the outcomes to see if the finding stood up.
But if it needs to start somewhere, the
analysis
shows that money that could save one person from dying of cervical cancer would save nearly 50 from dying from TB.
According to the Trump administration’s own analysis, more than twice as many Americans are now working in the solar industry than in coal, oil, and gas combined.
If we apply to catastrophic risks the same prudent
analysis
that leads us to buy insurance – multiplying probability by consequences – we would surely prioritize measures to reduce this kind of extreme risk.
His
analysis
has important implications for development economics, and I have used it often.
If that
analysis
is correct, we should be packing bankers off to Paris in specially chartered Eurostar trains, sealed to prevent them from attempting to jump off before they reach the Channel Tunnel.
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