Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
Europe’s Neo-Liberal ChallengeFor over 20 years I have
argued
that Western Europe’s high unemployment rates are unsustainable.
Several decades ago, the American political scientist Samuel P. Huntington
argued
that economic prosperity in developing countries with weak governing institutions would not necessarily lead to political stability.
India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru,
argued
that unlike religion – which tends to produce “intolerance, credulity and superstition, emotionalism and irrationalism” and “a temper of a dependent, unfree person” – a scientific temper “is the temper of a free man.”
Russia
argued
that America’s insistence on Assad’s immediate departure was an impediment to peace.
The Bank of England has
argued
that there should be no replication of the banking union grant of new powers to the European Central Bank at the expense of national central banks.
In the case of Greece, international bankers
argued
long and hard that debt restructuring would generate contagion far and wide within the eurozone – and perhaps more broadly.
Since politicians ask us to entrust them with sweeping powers, it can be
argued
that we should know as much as possible about their morality.
The government, Milton Friedman and others argued, told the poor: make more money and we will take away your free housing, food stamps, and income support.
At the same time, it could be
argued
that the spectacle of the opening ceremony was intended to overcome China’s historic humiliation by the West and signal a new chapter.
Together with other fundamentalists, such as the Pakistani philosopher Abul A'la Maududi, Qutb
argued
that true Islam had been infiltrated and corrupted by outside ideas.
It has been
argued
that much biodiversity has been lost as a result of a lack of understanding of its true value.
The first type of system, he argued, is concerned with materials, processing, and optimization.
As Erhard himself would have argued, ordoliberalism is not a one-size-fits-all solution.
Amartya Sen, the Nobel laureate economist, has
argued
that we can learn to live with these multiple identities and even thrive with the diversity of citizenship and loyalties that they allow us.
Likewise, it is often
argued
that the green economy will increase energy security, as green resources will leave countries less dependent on fossil-fuel imports.
As the great political philosopher Karl Popper argued, the only thing that we should not tolerate in an open society is intolerance.
And a United Nations advisory committee chaired by the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz has
argued
for a new global reserve currency, possibly one based on the SDR.
As I have
argued
before, convergence of emerging countries’ real average incomes, in the aggregate, with advanced countries’ incomes is likely to continue into the 2020’s.
As Antonio Gramsci
argued
long ago in his Prison Notebooks, “The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born, and in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.”
Though Fischer recognized the perils of free-flowing capital, he
argued
that the solution was not to maintain capital controls, but to undertake the reforms required to mitigate the dangers.
Meanwhile, the succession is still being
argued.
Conservatives
argued
for a private sector-driven economy, unfettered markets, low taxes, reduced government spending, and limited public goods.
During the ensuing discussion, several FOMC members
argued
that the inflation rate might be reduced to less than 2%, but nobody
argued
that inflation should be pushed higher if a lower, but still positive, rate was achieved.
Officials
argued
that such tools are more effective than capital-flow measures, which “are, in general, hard to implement and rather easy to circumvent.”
I have also argued, based on a model of mine, that as the return of a strong dollar by early 2015 threatened to inundate American markets with imports, firms became scared to supply more output at the same price.
But his presidency is not a replay of twentieth-century fascism, as Yale historian Timothy Snyder and others have
argued.
When then-Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin – who had presided over budget surpluses, helped to build up the reserve fund and cut state debt considerably –
argued
that Russia could not afford such an increase, he was fired.
Indeed, as Arvind Subramanian has argued, China’s share of global GDP and trade is what makes the renminbi likely to become a global reserve currency.
As he argued, unregulated capitalism can lead to regular bouts of over-capacity, under-consumption, and the recurrence of destructive financial crises, fueled by credit bubbles and asset-price booms and busts.
As the political philosopher Larry Siedentop has argued, “secularization is Christianity’s gift to the world.”
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