Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
Those who dispense money, he argued, should look only at new research ideas, not at the organizational charts of research institutions.
But such a link was seen in the early part of the twentieth century: capitalism, some argued, tends to generate chronic weakness in effective demand due to growing concentration of income, leading to a “savings glut,” because the very rich save a lot.
I, and others, had
argued
for years for a greater reliance on standstill agreements, restructurings, and bankruptcy.
The administration
argued
that TPP would create some good jobs – and that people who lost jobs as a result could be “compensated.”
He
argued
that in Clapper vs. Amnesty International USA, the Court had ruled that people give up their privacy online.
Still, as we
argued
in a recent policy brief for the G20’s T20 think-tank, work on this issue has only just begun.
The images of separated children were, she argued, “eerily reminiscent of the internment camps for US citizens and noncitizens of Japanese descent during World War II, now considered to have been one of the most shameful episodes in US history.”
Poor corporate governance, I have argued, was one of the biggest risks that business faced in 2017.
In 1904, US President Theodore Roosevelt
argued
that, “there are occasional crimes committed on so vast a scale and of such peculiar horror” that we should intervene by force of arms.
Russia has consistently
argued
that only Security Council resolutions, not General Assembly resolutions, are binding international law.
It was not monetary policy’s fault,
argued
both former Fed Chairmen Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke; if anything, they insisted, a lack of regulatory oversight was the culprit.
He basically
argued
that over the past ten years, Mexico, while hardly a paradise, was on something of a roll: inflation came under control, growth began to pick up, poverty was being reduced, and lower interest rates made credit available to the lower middle class.
In a much-discussed essay, Andrew Sullivan recently
argued
that “too much democracy” is to blame for Trump’s rise.
In an incisive response, Michael Lind
argued
that Sullivan gets things backwards: the real culprit is “too little democracy.”
Rather than mourning the ethnic-based, exclusionary Englishness that former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher had done so much to promote in the 1980s, I
argued
that Britons should embrace a new civic identity, based on deeper stories about their country.
It is frequently
argued
that the size of the assistance packages is a testament to Europe’s clout within the IMF.
“Some knowledge can be ‘embodied’ in books, blueprints, machines, and other kinds of physical capital, and we know how to introduce capital into a growth model,” Lucas argued, “but we also know that doing so does not by itself provide an engine of sustained growth.”
They both
argued
in the 1930s (in the middle of the Great Depression!) that government efforts to boost employment would always result in undesirable and unwarranted inflation, and would probably reduce output in the long run.
Taiwanese scholar Lee Hsiao-feng has recently
argued
that the concept “Chinese” is a meaningless word that was fabricated to justify rule over minorities.
Historically, they (India prominent among them)
argued
that the WTO is a tool of rich countries and so resisted much of what it sought to do.
How Israel Is Losing AmericaTEL AVIV – The late American diplomat George Ball once
argued
that Israel needed to be saved from its own suicidal policies “in spite of herself.”
Teaching PIIGS to FlyNEW YORK – Greece’s fiscal problems are, as I have
argued
many times, but the tip of a global iceberg.
After all, the analysts argued, housing prices had never fallen in nominal terms before.
Of the large oil companies, only one – France’s Total – has
argued
against Arctic oil exploration and exploitation on the grounds of environmental risks and economic costs.
But Yongbyon, contrary to those who have
argued
that it was on its last legs, has always constituted a clear and present danger.
Of course, it can be
argued
that China’s recent economic trajectory means that it is only a matter of time before the renminbi does become a match for the SDR’s incumbents.
In a speech in June, International Monetary Fund Deputy Managing Director Min Zhu
argued
that housing markets in several countries, including in Europe, Asia, and the Americas, “show signs of overheating.”
UNICEF responded with Adjustment with a Human Face, which
argued
that children must be protected during economic crises.
It
argued
for more expansionary macroeconomic policies to generate employment, public-sector investments to serve the poor, and the establishment of social-protection systems.
Next, D’Souza
argued
that since God gave us life, we are not in a position to complain if our life is not perfect.
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