Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
It is
argued
across the continent that a more flexible exchange rate for the Yuan will reduce China’s unfair advantage in international markets.
In addition, as the economists Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee of MIT have
argued
in their book The Second Machine Age, rapid advances in information technology may enable increasingly extensive automation.
(Sugar is the main culprit, as Robert Lustig, the author of Fat Chance, has argued.)
Whereas a few weeks ago, commentators and financial analysts
argued
that only a few months remained to rescue Europe, leading politicians, lurching from summit to summit, have recently talked in terms of days.
In Golden Fetters: The Gold Standard and the Great Depression, published in 1992, I
argued
that the deflationary engine that was the gold standard was a key cause of the 1930’s depression, and that abandoning it opened the door to recovery.
Then, as the late William Baumol, a professor at Princeton University,
argued
in 1966, overall productivity growth will slowly decline to zero, even if productivity growth within agriculture never slows.
Kishore Mahbubani has
argued
recently that we need to recognize that in China, as elsewhere, a significant internal contest between hard- and softer-liners is taking place.
For example, Yao Yang of Peking University has
argued
that the Chinese government is able to decide the right policies at critical points, because it is not unduly swayed by any interest group.
Some observers have
argued
for a higher stable inflation target in the eurozone to facilitate the “relative deflation” process in countries that need it, and to put the “zero bound” on interest rates further away, thereby enhancing the potential impact of monetary policy.
Developing countries and emerging markets, led by India,
argued
that the proper forum for discussing such global issues was an already established group within the United Nations, the Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters, whose status and funding needed to be elevated.
It was
argued
that economic theory studies the relationship between supply and demand; therefore it must take both of them as given.
Some Americans
argued
that the US no longer needed allies.
Some Europeans
argued
that the US was irreversibly bent on unilateralism.
It was Henry Kissinger who
argued
after the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington of 2001 that tragedy could be turned into opportunity.
Three years ago, I
argued
that whether the benefits of smart machines are distributed broadly will depend not on their design, but on the design of the policies surrounding them.
As a result, ASEAN, as a McKinsey study argued, effectively “grants a veto to any country that resists regional economic integration.”
As we
argued
in this year’s Gates Foundation Goalkeepers Report, better health care and education – two pillars of the World Bank’s “human capital index” – can unlock productivity and innovation, reduce poverty, and generate prosperity.
Harvard’s Michael Sandel has
argued
that there should be limits to markets, and that there are things that money cannot (or should not) be allowed to buy.
In my book Capitalism 4.0, I
argued
that comparable political upheavals would follow the fourth systemic breakdown of global capitalism heralded by the 2008 crisis.
Kasparov pointedly asked what products such as the iPhone 5 really add to our capabilities, and
argued
that most of the science underlying modern computing was settled by the seventies.
For years, Iran’s “conservative radicals” – a concept that combines extreme conservatism in matters of faith and philosophy with radical views on violence – have
argued
that negotiation and rapprochement with the US are foolish and futile.
In his 2000 book The Mystery of Capital, Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto
argued
that access to credit is a powerful under-used force for development.
Many professors
argued
that the demands of research would render their teaching obligations impossible to fulfill.
Many
argued
at the time that support for republican Spain meant helping the far more dangerous anarchists and Communists at a time when the Soviet threat in Europe was growing.
As the US statesman/academic Joseph Nye has argued: “For decades the United States and Saudi Arabia have had a balance of asymmetries in which we depended on them as the swing producer of oil and they depended on us for ultimate military security.”
But even that reduced level of aid was disputed by people in Seoul, who
argued
that conditions on improved North/South relations needed to be attached.
It may be
argued
that the Holocaust was a crime so uniquely abhorrent as to qualify as a special case.
He
argued
that the indictments would probably be based on cell-phone records, and that Israeli agents had penetrated the Lebanese cell-phone network.
In his 1959 book The Business Cycle , in a chapter entitled “The Lower Turning Point,” Cambridge University economist R. C. O. Matthews summarized a host of factors that business-cycle theorists of his day
argued
tend to bring on recovery automatically.
Many commentators have
argued
that fiscal stimulus has largely failed not because it was misguided, but because it was not large enough to fight a “Great Recession.”
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