Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
In my December 2008 column, I
argued
that the only practical way to shorten the coming period of painful deleveraging and slow growth would be a sustained burst of moderate inflation, say, 4-6% for several years.
I
argued
for this during East Asia's crisis; the IMF
argued
against me, preferring its big-bail-out strategy.
My colleagues and I in NCJDSU
argued
that this new form of human prion disease was likely to be linked to exposure to the BSE agent, probably by eating BSE-infected meat products.
A stable international order, he argued, demanded the leadership of the United States – a powerful model for democracy in the world – supported by strong ties with Europe.
Police were accused of using excessive force to try to disperse members of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and their supporters, who
argued
that the project would contaminate water and damage sacred burial sites.
As environmental lawyers Richard Webster and Julie LeMense
argued
in 2008, “the nuclear industry…is like the financial industry was prior to the crisis” that erupted that year.
As Edward Glaeser has argued, it is hard to believe that the median family in the United States, which supposedly is worse off than in 1970, would be willing to give up its cell phones, Internet access, and new health technologies in order to return to that halcyon era.
Writing in The New York Times earlier this month, Paul Schroeter, an emeritus professor of history,
argued
that open diplomacy is often “fatally flawed,” and gave as an example the need for secret negotiations to reach agreement on the Treaty of Versailles.
When I welcomed Mario Draghi’s strong statement in August, I
argued
that the ECB’s new “outright monetary transactions” program needed to be complemented by progress toward a more integrated eurozone, with a fiscal authority, a banking union, and some form of debt mutualization.
The OMT program’s success, I argued, presupposed a decisive change in the macroeconomic policy mix throughout the eurozone.
US Supreme Court Judge Louis Brandeis famously
argued
for “the states as laboratories.”
But, within China, as the American political scientists Andrew Nathan and Andrew Scobell
argued
recently in Foreign Affairs, there is growing tension between domestic economic priorities and Chinese leaders’ belief that “China’s political stability and territorial integrity are threatened by foreign actors and forces.”
During the mid-2000’s, there was a brief window when some
argued
that currencies had become more stable as a corollary of the “Great Moderation” in macroeconomic activity.
Huxley
argued
that all goodness could be traced to blood kinship, while Kropotkin
argued
that goodness and blood kinship were completely divorced from one another - one had nothing to do with the each other.
As Harvard University’s Robert Lawrence has argued, deindustrialization is common and predates the recent wave of economic globalization.
I have
argued
that all of the conditions necessary in this context have been satisfied, and this will continue to be the case so long as the Islamic State maintains its horrifying modus operandi.
Nor was Keynes in favor of uninhibited fiscal stimulus, regardless of economic conditions; rather, he
argued
that “the boom, not the slump, is the right time for austerity at the Treasury.”
By the mid-2000’s, Summers
argued
at a recent International Monetary Fund conference, the average prospective return on new investment in the United States had fallen below any feasible reduction in the Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate.
In the 1930’s, the economist Alvin Hansen
argued
that opportunities for new investment in already-rich countries were drying up.
But Trump’s lawyers have
argued
that his constitutional powers extend even further.
The problem is that more than half of such spending is on education, science and technology, and infrastructure – the areas that Obama had just
argued
should be strengthened.
Kahneman and Tversky
argued
that when calculating probabilities, people make systematic mistakes.
As the proponents of Asian values argued, all human rights - civil and political as well as social and economic - need to be strengthened.
The reason the center could not hold is as relevant today as it was then: “The best,” Yeats argued, “lack all conviction, while the worst/ are full of passionate intensity.”
It is regularly
argued
(to the point of having become conventional wisdom) that cheap and easy portfolio reconfiguration, technical trading strategies, and investors’ moves from one sector to another force managers to pay too much attention to immediate financial results.
Mr Verheugen
argued
that a referendum would force Germany’s political élite to take more account of the concerns of the people, which they failed to do when taking Germany into the single European currency.
But now “secular stagnation” – the concept du jour in US policy debates since former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers
argued
last November that the US (and perhaps other advanced economies) has entered a long period of anemic GDP growth – may also be coming to Latin America.
For nearly 20 years, one group of activists
argued
– in the face of ever-mounting evidence – that global warming was a fabrication.
As I
argued
in my 2007 book Cool It, the most rational response to global warming is to make alternative energy technologies so cheap that the whole world can afford them.
It has been
argued
that Europe’s institutions move forward only in times of crisis.
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