Appears
in sentence
2854 examples of Appears in a sentence
The ratio of Chinese monthly retail sales to industrial production, while erratic, has been slowly trending higher since 2008, and there
appears
to have been another uptick in consumption recently.
Putin
appears
to want a similar outcome.
Notwithstanding the unfinished business of consumer-led rebalancing, China now
appears
to be embracing yet another shift in its core economic strategy – driven by a broad array of “supply-side initiatives” that range from capacity reduction and deleveraging to innovation and productivity.
But this shift in emphasis – in the 13th Five-Year Plan as well as in the debate and messaging at this year’s China Development Forum –
appears
to be an important signal.
The Taliban RebornNEW DELHI – The lull in headline-grabbing terror attacks
appears
to be over.
Pakistan, after joining the US, as an “ally” in the war on terror now
appears
to be paying a high price domestically for becoming a “rented state.”
By now, the disruption to trade
appears
extensive enough to factor negatively into forecasts for economic growth.
The trade war
appears
to be among the reasons for a renewed slowdown in China.
Add an uptick in vegetarianism, and it
appears
that the global temperature rise could be limited to 3º Celsius.
The idea of reforming the system by introducing a supranational reserve currency is also, it appears, supported by Russia and other emerging markets.
In many cases, the answer
appears
to be related to barriers to housing construction.
Current inflation is more broad-based than it appears, regardless of the controversy surrounding the adequacy of China’s CPI basket in reflecting the reality of underlying price movements.
Unfortunately, the West
appears
to lack up-to-date knowledge about the situation in Moldova.
Only one Latin American country (Haiti)
appears
in the group of low HDI countries, while the rest are in the medium and high HDI groups.
It is important that the European Commission not allow France to carve out special rules for itself in competition policy, as it
appears
to be doing with its budget deficits.
That total is not as high as the death toll from tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and malaria; but, unlike those diseases, every mammal
appears
to be susceptible to rabies.
Indeed, the Kremlin
appears
to be waiting for Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko’s government to fail and the West to split on the issue and stop taking an interest in its resolution.
Indeed, the global economy has become so interconnected, and world markets so powerful, that there
appears
to be little scope for national policies to disrupt hyper-mobile capital flows.
What remains unknown is whether they have learned the lesson other postcommunist parties learned - ie, to keep reform going once growth
appears.
As a result, the US Congress
appears
to be growing more hostile toward a deal; indeed, the longer it takes to conclude a final agreement, the more likely Congress is to scupper it.
Avoiding new tension with Taiwan
appears
to have been a calculated decision by China’s leaders as they begin their own – perhaps not yet fully settled – changing of the guard.
In Taiwan’s south, long a DPP stronghold, that approach
appears
to have paid off.
China’s government
appears
to believe that Ma’s victory is a step in this direction.
Secretly, the hope in Berlin, Paris, and other European capitals
appears
to be that Obama will still sort things out.
So the idea of decoupling
appears
to be a chimera.
But this year, the United Kingdom
appears
to be the only one preparing to tighten its policy – and that is assuming recent political ruptures haven’t altered its fiscal orientation, which will be reflected in the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s Autumn Statement.
Making matters worse, economic growth across the EU
appears
to be slowing – and that was even before the eruption of mass protests in France and Italy’s confrontation with the EU over its proposed budget.
The European Union's highly touted "Lisbon Declaration" of a few years ago, which proclaimed that Europe would become the world's most competitive region by 2010,
appears
laughable to Americans, whose productivity gains seem to scale new heights constantly.
Today, it appears, there is nothing left of Franco-American goodwill.
Economically frustrated youth welcome Ahn with loud cheers wherever he appears, because he expresses their anxiety that the chaebol are stifling new companies that could create much-needed jobs.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
There
Movie
About
Their
While
First
Other
Government
After
Growth
Where
Economic
Political
Would
World
People
Could
Indeed
Being