Balance
in sentence
3328 examples of Balance in a sentence
But, using some “out-of-court resolution” mechanisms devised by the RBI, and with capital support from the government, banks should have well-provisioned
balance
sheets by March 2017.
Witness how expenditure cuts by US state governments – many of which are constitutionally required to
balance
their budgets – frustrated, to some degree, America’s massive federal-government stimulus in 2010-2011.
As a result, we are committed to dialogue and compromise as the only way to
balance
the many competing demands and opinions that pervade public affairs.
America can learn from the lesson the nineteenth century, when Great Britain was a preponderant power and took the lead in maintaining the
balance
of power between Europe’s major states, promoting an open international economic system, and maintaining freedom of the seas.
The first priority is to achieve gender
balance
at the top.
In any federal system, a
balance
must be struck between those who are charged with assessing economic conditions in the whole monetary area and those who represent the interests of particular regions.
The Bundesbank had a similar arrangement with a central/regional
balance
of 1:1.1.
For starters, the
balance
of power between France and Germany will probably now shift a bit toward the former, given that the French economy is strengthening, and will be positioned for renewed growth after Macron’s promised reforms.
For, excluding oil, Africa has a negative trade
balance
with China.
By eliminating Saddam Hussein’s Sunni regime, the US paved the way for a Shia-led government, a development that tilted the regional
balance
of power toward Iran and left Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia feeling encircled by a Shia coalition.
But, as periphery countries move into current-account
balance
and northern countries such as Germany run massive surpluses, the flip side has been deterioration in emerging-market surpluses, heightening their vulnerabilities.
In sum, the fact that the US trade
balance
has defied gravity for so many years has made it possible for the dollar to do so, too.
After all, futures markets predicted prices of $75 or higher; the Saudi and Russian governments needed $100 to
balance
their budgets; and any price much below $50 was considered unsustainable, because it would put the US shale-oil industry out of business.
Saudi Arabia or Russia may want, or even “need,” an oil price of $70 or $80 to
balance
their budgets.
Of course, negative returns make their
balance
sheets shakier: a defined-benefit pension plan needs positive returns to break even, and when most of its assets yield a negative nominal return, such results become increasingly difficult to achieve.
The current-account balance, the difference between a country’s investment and saving position, is key to understanding these linkages.
But, while abolishing energy subsidies is absolutely essential to
balance
the budget and put the economy on a sound footing, these steps also risk hitting eastern Ukraine, which contains a substantial Russophone minority, particularly hard.
In Europe, every
balance
sheet available has been tapped to forestall a debt crisis in the periphery, resulting in large bailout packages for Greece, Ireland, and Portugal, and the contamination of the ECB’s
balance
sheet.
Most importantly, too many government and household
balance
sheets remain out of equilibrium in an excessively asset-based global economy.
On the upside, the US could have a “Sputnik moment”: a sense of national unity, common purpose, and shared sacrifice leads to structural reforms that focus on re-aligning
balance
sheets over the medium term, enhancing job creation, and improving competitiveness.
Parameters become variables;
balance
sheet repairs proceed in a slow and uneven fashion; and policymakers experience an uncomfortable shift in the
balance
of benefits, costs, and risks.
This “top-level governance architecture,” as it is known in China, has been essential for coordinating and orchestrating the different supply chains and the overall web of contracts to achieve the delicate
balance
among individual, family, corporate, social, and national objectives.
Governments are cutting back public investment in the name of budget balance, and private investors cannot invest robustly and securely in alternative energy when publicly regulated power grids, liability rules, pricing formulas, and national energy policies are uncertain and heavily disputed.
Had Argentina not privatized, its budget would have been roughly in
balance.
The right place to start to address it is by creating a better
balance
between education and commercial disinformation.
Rumsfeld may understand this calculus in principle, but his words and actions show that he does not know how to
balance
the equation in practice.
Moreover, the way the war was funded left households with strong
balance
sheets and pent-up demand once peace returned.
Likewise, monetary authorities have been playing an increasingly active role, with the major central banks’
balance
sheets having expanded from about $5.5 trillion in 2005 to $13.9 trillion earlier this year.
The answer hinges on the
balance
businesses strike between value capture and creation.
Many EU leaders see newfound respect coming in the form of a “strategic partnership” with China that is designed to
balance
the power of the United States.
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