Belief
in sentence
1599 examples of Belief in a sentence
This Recovery is DifferentBRUSSELS – The misguided
belief
that “this time is different” led policymakers to permit the credit boom of the early 2000’s to continue for too long, thus preparing the ground for the biggest financial crisis in living memory.
But now, when it comes to recovery, the
belief
that this time should not be different might be equally dangerous.
The Congress of Vienna reinstated the principle of the balance of power, based on the
belief
that all parties shared a common interest transcending their respective ambitions, and re-established the Concert of Nations, which for two generations stopped territorial and ideological revisionism of the type seen from 1789 to 1815.
There is another strongly held belief: that Japan cannot recover without a steep decline in the yen.
The
belief
that Russians desire an authoritarian leader is also misplaced.
Yet governments across Europe have clamped down on infrastructure spending for years, giving precedence to fiscal austerity and debt reduction in the misguided
belief
that government borrowing crowds out private investment and reduces growth.
Underlying the “Asia for Asians” trope may be China’s
belief
that the US, not its own behavior, is to blame for its neighbors’ defiance.
In much of the West, DST has long been used as a way to save energy and extend outdoor time for workers during the dark winter months and the hot summer months (though the European Union is now considering the elimination of DST, in the
belief
that it costs more than it saves, and owing to the effect on the human biorhythm).
A Currency Crash Course for PoliticiansMUMBAI – One major impetus behind US President Donald Trump’s protectionist policies is his
belief
that China has artificially weakened its currency in order to dump goods in the United States.
The
belief
that Muslim countries are likely to fall prey to despotism and will fail to reform their political and economic systems partly reflects the legacy of colonialism.
Conventional wisdom among economists and investors has a long record of failing to spot major turning points; so the near-universal
belief
today that Greece faces permanent depression is no reason to despair.
The choice to save the banks from the financial consequences of their own errors indicates a shift in values away from
belief
in the wisdom of the market.
Lyndon Johnson’s War on Poverty in the mid-1960’s reflected an era of national optimism and the
belief
that society should make collective efforts to solve common problems, such as poverty, pollution, and health care.
While this
belief
unfortunately does have some validity, it requires one very important caveat: Russia is part of that ship.
Prior to his election victory, US President Donald Trump railed against “sending foreign aid to countries that hate us,” reflecting a widespread
belief
that aid needs to be cut.
Chinese leaders’ longstanding reluctance to participate in international sanctions is often attributed to their
belief
in judging actions by whether or not they work.
That game – based on a
belief
in ever-spiraling home prices – is over.
Contrary to popular belief, the true global trade dilemma of our time is not so much liberalization versus protectionism, but the rights of capital versus the rights of people.
The prevailing
belief
that market discipline corrects such imbalances is false, for two reasons.
Moreover, Article 18 defines this right broadly: everyone has the “freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or
belief
in teaching, practice, worship, and observance.”
So, contrary to popular belief, the incidence of most NCDs other than diabetes has actually been falling.
Such a faith understands that
belief
is a matter of hearts and minds, not of bricks and stone.
If it can renew the European model at home, it will be able to project that success much more widely, particularly in southern Europe, in turn reinforcing confidence and
belief
in the EU, particularly among the young generation.
This suggests a more fundamental reason for the economic crisis: the dominance of the Chicago school of economics, with its
belief
in the self-regulating properties of unfettered markets.
This
belief
justified, or rationalized, the de-regulation of financial markets in the name of the so called “efficient-market hypothesis.”
Schmidt reinforced his image as a pragmatist by consistently voicing his deep skepticism of grand designs and long-term visions, albeit without ever renouncing his fundamental
belief
that there was a moral basis for his political objectives.
America’s gun lovers reject such evidence, and mass shootings like the one in Las Vegas serve only to reinforce their
belief
that firearms are their only true protection in a dangerous world.
Instead, these reformers stuck to the Marxist conviction that property relations were more important than the market, without realizing that this flawed
belief
was a remnant of Marxism.
Xi and his advisers should not succumb to the illusory
belief
that such a conflict would boost their standing with the Chinese public.
Every schoolchild learns how Galileo was forced to his knees to recant his
belief
that the earth revolves around the sun, or how the Church was up in arms again in 1859, when Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species , arguing that all living organisms, including humans, result from a long, slow process of evolution.
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