Believes
in sentence
1033 examples of Believes in a sentence
China, Rodrik believes, is like a Rorschach test for economists.
Another compelling explanation comes from a venture capitalist who credits Chinese society with copious reserves of entrepreneurial energy that derives, he believes, from the fact that Chinese culture attaches very little shame to failing in a business enterprise.
European Commission President José Manuel Barroso
believes
that protectionist pressures are increasing.
Steeped in denial, the Federal Reserve is treating the disease as a cyclical problem – deploying the full force of monetary accommodation to compensate for what it
believes
to be a temporary shortfall in aggregate demand.
In fact, most of the world
believes
that Germany should adopt a more expansive fiscal policy.
Some support repeal and replace anyway: Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, for example, is a relatively consistent libertarian who
believes
that the benefits of minimizing the government’s role in health care somehow outweigh the costs to lower- and middle-income working Americans.
He
believes
that he was summoned to treat bleeding caused by something else.
Indeed, the UK’s “Leave” constituency already firmly
believes
that the UK would be better off on its own, and that Brexit will hurt Europeans much more than it hurts Britons.
Her ultimate objective is to survive as Prime Minister, and she
believes
that controlling immigration – a longtime personal obsession – will endear her to “Leave” voters, and that ending the European Court of Justice’s jurisdiction in Britain will pacify the nationalists in her Conservative Party.
Obama, he said,
believes
in “liberation theology,” which means that he must be a “socialist,” thus un-American.
Whether a president can actually be indicted is an unsettled question; but if Mueller
believes
that the president shouldn’t be indicted, he would submit his charges to the House, which would then decide whether to proceed with impeachment.
But, so long as society
believes
in it, it works.
Moreover, he
believes
that it is “unsustainable,” and that if the situation is not rectified, NATO faces a “dismal” future.
Trump’s reported pick to be EU ambassador, Ted Malloch, told Greek television that he
believes
Greece should have left the eurozone four years ago.
No one seriously
believes
that individual member states – particularly Italy and Greece, the two countries most affected – can overcome the long-term challenges posed by large-scale migration on their own.
Like the Little Flower, May is so discreet that even many members of her own party have doubts about what she actually
believes.
Corbyn, like a true Leninist,
believes
that any strategy is acceptable in the pursuit of power.
If Merkel’s government
believes
that paying lip service to growth is enough, it is playing with fire: a euro collapse in which not only Germans would be badly burned.
What grabbed headlines was that the IMF now
believes
that countries could even use capital controls, renamed “capital flow management measures,” if implemented alongside monetary and fiscal measures, accumulation of foreign-exchange reserves, and macroprudential financial regulations.
If he
believes
that, he is fooling only himself.
Power in Russia is a product of inertia and personal willfulness, and a generally apathetic public has traditionally surrendered to the country’s paradox of tyranny: a weak state
believes
that it can function as a strong state by depriving citizens of basic liberties and the ability to make their own decisions.
The Bush Administration
believes
that US military power buys security, even though terrorism has increased since the Iraq War.
This reflects the benefits that NATO
believes
can be drawn from Israel’s unique military experience.
Hiftar
believes
that the key to solving Libya’s myriad crises lies in establishing a strong national army capable of subduing the Islamists who are destabilizing the country.
Since the premium would be determined by the market, it would be higher in occupations that the market
believes
to be in danger from outsourcing or technical change.
Perhaps he
believes
that the same goes for India and Pakistan: They can focus either on their mutual enmity or on mutual development.
Russia clearly
believes
that the current tight world energy market and high prices give it enough leverage over the West to maintain its current approach.
He
believes
that he is doing the right thing and following the prudent course in waiting for the Syrian conflict to burn itself out in some way while minimizing the long-term risk to American lives.
For anyone who
believes
that progress should remain the compass guiding societies in the twenty-first century, the priority is to redefine it in today’s context and to spell out the corresponding policy agenda.
He
believes
that the US, as the world’s leading power, can influence that decision “more than any other country.”
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