Analysis
in sentence
1393 examples of Analysis in a sentence
In a famous
analysis
of the Great Depression, the economic historian Charles Kindleberger argued that it arose from a failure of world leadership.
To make good decisions, voters need to assess reliable facts, from economic data to terrorism analysis, presented transparently and without bias.
If desirable real estate is in scarce supply, credit creation and allocation can at times be driven not by rational
analysis
of alternative investment projects, but by self-reinforcing cycles in which more credit drives asset prices higher, which then sustains expectations of further rises, leading to more borrowing demand and credit supply.
Yet, to make the most of data sharing, donors should also shift their mindset and invest more in quality data collection and management during project implementation, and sustain funding for curation and continued
analysis
of datasets.
For Schmidt, thorough
analysis
was a necessary prerequisite for all political action.
They also conducted a cost/benefit
analysis
before having a child.
Moreover, there is some safeguard against complex regulatory thickets if new rules need to undergo a cost-benefit
analysis.
According to a recent
analysis
by the Council of Economic Advisers (CEA), about ten million people gained health insurance coverage in 2014 as a result of the ACA – the largest increase in coverage in four decades.
But statistical
analysis
of this evidence – the only accessible macro-level quantitative data for the whole country – does not confirm caste as a clear indicator of deprivation.
If this interpretation is correct, the heightened attention given to the monthly BLS headline indicators needs to be accompanied by a broader
analysis
and a different mindset.
Again, rigorous
analysis
requires testing these historical analogies for fitness with current circumstances.
This
analysis
comes in three complementary documents: the World Economic Outlook, the Global Financial Stability Report, and the Fiscal Monitor.
China’s economy is growing more rapidly, and its total size will probably overtake Japan’s in a decade or two, but any serious
analysis
of power in East Asia must include Japan as a major factor.
There was no “policy skeleton,” no cost-benefit analysis, and no evidence that alternative policy options were considered.
At the macro level, the story of the post-2008 decade is almost always understood as a failure of economic
analysis
and communication.
In his new history of the post-2007 era, Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World, he shows that the economic history of the past ten years has been driven more by deep historical currents than by technocrats’ errors of
analysis
and communication.
A similar
analysis
of many other advanced economies suggests that, as in the US, the bottom is quite close but it has not yet been reached.
Beyond their short-term benefits to individuals, extensive economic
analysis
also has demonstrated significant financial benefits to society for years to come.
Some policymakers have concluded from Phelps’
analysis
that the unemployment rate cannot be lowered permanently without ever-increasing levels of inflation.
How one views these risks depends on the costs of undoing mistakes, which in turn depends on other properties of the inflation-unemployment relationship that Phelps’
analysis
did not address.
But it is a misuse of that
analysis
to conclude that nothing can be done about unemployment, or that monetary authorities should focus exclusively on inflation.
On its “Bank Underground” blog, which is fast becoming the most interesting of the BoE’s publications, you can find
analysis
of the evolution of risk premia.
The European Commission added its voice last month, when it published its scorecard on macroeconomic imbalances and called for an in-depth
analysis
of the German surplus.
This
analysis
calls for the most radical action: to develop an economic and social system in which resources, particularly wealth and power, are more evenly distributed.
The main point is that restoring growth requires a careful
analysis
of structural balance, attention to demand constraints in the non-tradable sector, and a focus on the impediments to expanding the tradable sector.
We have to prioritize, which is what an economic
analysis
of costs and benefits can do.
This is a fantastic outcome, of course, though there has been no
analysis
of how cost-effective it is.
The World Bank has tried to reinvent itself as a supplier of global public goods and a “knowledge bank” that provides data, analysis, and research to its developing-country clients.
Mainstream economics offers a straightforward
analysis
of and policy response to such a transformation.
Whatever remains for public investments are sure to be wasted, as projects tend to pass cost-benefit
analysis
when the financing comes from easy money, generously provided by mother nature.
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