Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
It has been
argued
that this was one of the problems of “belated nations” like Germany a hundred years ago.
In 2012, the venture capitalist William Janeway
argued
that economic development is a three-player game involving the state, private entrepreneurial innovation, and financial capitalism, with inevitable cyclical overshoots that create the conditions for the next wave of invention and output growth.
The French
argued
for European economic governance alongside the monetary union, but that looked to others as imposing too much French planisme .
In the communiqué released after September’s G20 summit, the group’s leaders repeatedly mentioned steps to boost world growth through infrastructure investment, and
argued
for more coordination among monetary, fiscal, and structural policies.
I had long
argued
that the notion of decoupling was a myth; the evidence now corroborates that view.
Of course, it could be
argued
that GDP growth causes trade growth, rather than vice versa – that is, until one examines the countries in depth.
In the 1950’s, the French economist Jacques Rueff, a close adviser to Charles de Gaulle,
argued
that “L’Europe se fera par la monnaie, ou ne se fera pas” (Europe will be made through the currency, or it will not be made).
If Europeans want to take part in vital global decisions - as the EU security strategy outlined not long ago by Javier Solana
argued
- they must find a middle way between the unanimity rule and the reality of member states' actual power.
Many have
argued
that Indian women should stand up to their families and refuse to abort their daughters.
John Williams, President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, recently
argued
that the Great Deflation could be beaten only by targeting the price level and nominal national income simultaneously – a New Deal-like approach featuring joint action by the Fed and the government.
Economists since David Ricardo have
argued
that restricting imports reduces consumer welfare and impedes productivity growth.
The journalists who knew about Mitterrand’s second wife
argued
that it was a private matter.
Some have
argued
instead that gold’s long upward march has been partly driven by the development of new financial instruments that make it easier to trade and speculate in gold.
In addition, as others have eloquently argued, the topline numbers and statistics hide wide variance within the Asian American community itself.
Instead, policymakers
argued
that unproductive, debt-financed government spending would panic businessmen and bankers into reducing further their already-low support of economic activity (and this at a time when Britain’s unemployment rate was triple its current level).
There was no dearth of ideas and topics, participants argued, that existing textbooks neglected, and that should receive more attention two decades from now.
Economists working on the border of economics and psychology, for example,
argued
that behavioral finance, in which human foibles are brought to bear to explain the failure of the so-called efficient markets hypothesis, would be given more prominence.
Economic historians, meanwhile,
argued
that future textbooks would embed analysis of recent experience in the longer-term historical record.
Development economists, for their part,
argued
that much more attention would be paid to randomized trials and field experiments.
Until the 1970s, it was widely
argued
that, while both countries suffered from extreme poverty, underdevelopment, and disease, India’s model was superior, because its people were free to choose their own rulers.
George Akerlof, who shared the Nobel Prize with me in 2001, and his colleagues have
argued
forcefully that there is an optimal rate of inflation, greater than zero.
Leading economists have long
argued
that the West’s greater reliance on markets resulted in faster and more robust economic growth.
Adam Smith, that icon of market theory,
argued
that wealth is created when public institutions enable the “invisible hand” of the market to align interests.
Max Mosley admitted participating in this (not illegal) happening, but sued the News of the World for breach of privacy; the newspaper
argued
that it was in the “public interest” that Mosley’s sexual activities be disclosed.
Many historians have
argued
that German society under Hitler was somehow uniquely evil.
Shockingly, Russia
argued
that it had the right to attack a country that harbored people to whom it had just issued passports, scaring all countries with Russian minorities.
Stephen P. Cohen, a renowned analyst of India, has
argued
that, since the country gained independence, its“officials have inculcated the precepts of George Washington’s Farewell Address of 1796: that India, like the United States, inhabits its own geographical sphere, in India’s case between the Himalayas and the Wide Indian Ocean, and thus [it] is in a position of both dominance and detachment.
Even before Arafat’s death, Abbas
argued
that the use of force by militants weakens the Palestinian negotiating position.
I once
argued
that the three “arrows” of Abenomics – monetary easing, fiscal expansion, and a long-term growth strategy – should be given grades of A, B,and E, respectively.
In his 1945 book Science, the Endless Frontier , Bush
argued
that basic scientific research needs substantial and stable financial support; that support should be potentially available to all researchers; and that peer review should ultimately decide how and to whom funds are allocated.
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