Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
For example, forty years ago, when fear of nuclear proliferation was new, my teacher and friend Vassili Leontief, who invented the macroeconomic table of inter-industrial flows,
argued
that the best indicator of an illegal arms program is massive electricity consumption.
Some have
argued
that even though the PBOC has stopped buying US and other foreign assets, China’s sovereign wealth funds still do, and that this, too, counts as manipulation.
As the international law expert Richard Falk has argued, it is Trump’s “demagoguery” that enables this approach, as it “blinds adherents to their true material self-interests and misidentifies their real social enemies.”
But Serbia was not complicit, the Court argued, because “it has not been proven” that the intention of committing the acts of genocide at Srebrenica “had been brought to Belgrade’s attention.”
In the US, they argued, this would mean adopting a much more progressive federal tax system.
The European Union and American economists in the Clinton administration
argued
for passage of the Kyoto Treaty only by creating models for something that wasn’t the Kyoto Treaty.
Did they not understand, he argued, that this would lead to factory closures and social turbulence in China?
The Bank for International Settlements has long
argued
that pure inflation targeting is not compatible with financial stability.
It can be
argued
that during the colonial era, France willed the happiness of Algerians, not only the greatness of France.
The Fed, Bernanke argued, cannot be expected to help them.
But, as some of the French protestors argued, their focus is on financial survival until “the end of the month,” not on benefits a decade from now.
Harvard Law School’s Roberto Unger has
argued
that overcoming the challenges of knowledge-based development will demand “inclusive vanguardism.”
Reform does not require a state of emergency, as is often
argued.
I
argued
that, otherwise, the UK would be on track to add fewer than 300 MW of new wind capacity per year.
The PVV has
argued
for the closing of all Islamic schools, the required “assimilation” of all immigrants (whatever that means), and even the prohibition of halal (Islamic) slaughter.
As long as policies and institutions to do this were in place, Keynes argued, risk could be let to look after itself.
The problem, as Egyptian researcher Dina El-Khawaga has argued, is that it may be impossible “to introduce reform on a structurally corrupt basis.”
But the US has
argued
that arms-control measures banning offensive capabilities could weaken defenses against attacks and would be impossible to verify or enforce.
Some
argued
in favor of delaying consolidation, because the economy was still in a deep recession; too harsh an adjustment, according to this view, would have a major impact on a still-weak private economy.
Austerity, it was argued, was needed to stem the rise in the debt ratio and safeguard long-term growth.
As I
argued
in my recent book The Only Game in Town, “No company and certainly no country will be able to harvest its realizable potential if it fails to embrace and empower human talent regardless of gender, race, culture, sexual orientation, and perspectives.”
The General and his monetary guru, Jacques Rueff,
argued
that the US used the dollar's status as the major reserve currency of the Bretton Woods fixed exchange-rate regime in order to run deficits and pay for its overseas military adventurism (at that time in Vietnam).
As political scientist Victor Cha
argued
before the election, changes in regional capabilities, the emergence of new threats and challenges, and the diffusion of connectivity in the twenty-first century argue for a new, more multilateral security structure in Asia.
It can, of course, be
argued
that these policies produced the “Great Moderation” – the reduction in cyclical volatility – that characterized the advanced market economies in the years leading up to 2007.
Yet it can also be
argued
that each cycle of monetary easing culminated in a credit-driven “boom and bust” that then had to be met by another cycle of easing.
Pan Yue, vice-director of the State Environmental Protection Administration, recently
argued
in a China Daily article in favor of stronger emissions regulations and a more “green-oriented China,” warning that “China’s image among the international community” was in jeopardy.
Even legendary investors like Warren Buffett, it is argued, are not really outperforming the market.
Economics has long assumed that whatever informs our preferences is exogenous to the issue at hand: de gustibus non est disputandum, as George Stigler and Gary Becker
argued.
It also
argued
that labeling GM foods is required in accordance with consumers' right to make informed choices about what they eat.
Trump has
argued
that the Fed should raise interest rates.
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