Believes
in sentence
1033 examples of Believes in a sentence
Is there a single economist who
believes
that Argentina’s policies are almost four times better than El Salvador’s?
China
believes
that it has a legitimate right to increase its military power, given its need to protect its expanding economic interests, which include secure sea routes for the transport of energy and other goods.
But for the past three years, France has had a government that no longer
believes
that a socially oriented urban policy works.
It
believes
only in repression and says so openly.
Russia knows that such negotiations will be fruitless, but
believes
that another seemingly innocent appeal for more talks would strain EU unity, which appears to be a vital goal for Putin.
Unlike many left-wing leaders who prefer to attack Europe and blame the EU for all domestic ills, Macron
believes
that France has been weakened by its own failure to implement structural reforms.
Macron
believes
that without deep economic reforms, it will be impossible to change the situation in Europe, or to restore balance to Franco-German relations.
He believes, however, that he can avoid extreme solutions; in diplomacy, anything can happen, and the worst-case scenario is never guaranteed.
Simply put, one cannot sustain current levels of consumption and entitlements without crowding out public-sector investment, unless one
believes
that the state’s borrowing power is unlimited, and that the intergenerational burden shift is unimportant.
At both the national and international levels, Trump
believes
that the less regulation, the better.
In this sense, Macron, who was indeed once a banker for Rothschild, and who
believes
in open borders and international institutions, is a man of the left.
He can draft and help shape legislation that he
believes
to be in the public interest.
By contrast, our government
believes
that this program has failed, leaving the population weary of reform.
One is hard pressed to find any analyst who
believes
that Israeli air strikes could do more than set back Iran’s program for a few months while unifying fractured Iranian opinion around support for nuclear weapons.
The harsh truth is that neither the IMF nor the Bush administration really
believes
in free markets.
But if he actually
believes
it, a lot of damage will be done before people discover the truth.
Haldane still
believes
this will happen; the BoE’s mistake was more a matter of “timing” than of logic.
But opinion polls continue to show a huge drop in Toledo's popularity, and no one
believes
that he will make it to the end of his term in 2006.
Trump
believes
that by threats, sanction, and bravado, he can force North Korea to relinquish its nuclear weapons.
He
believes
that they view themselves as “victims” and have become “dependent” on the government.
Of course, Syria still
believes
in a “Greater Syria” and never fully accepted Lebanon’s sovereignty.
In Europe, the European Central Bank
believes
that the danger of uncontrolled inflation following a loss of public confidence in its commitment to low inflation outweighs the costs of European employment that is far too high.
Thus, China’s ability to bring North Korea into line – a capacity that the US, in particular,
believes
Xi has – may in fact depend on the outcome of a more epochal struggle to bring the PLA fully under central authority.
Everyone who
believes
in and supports the democratic tide that swept Latin America following the fall of communism in Europe must affirm their commitment to monitoring the weak state of freedom of expression and democratic governance in Venezuela.
Alan Greenspan, the former Fed chairman, recently said that he now
believes
that speculative bubbles are important driving forces in our economy, but that, at the same time, the world’s monetary authorities cannot control bubbles.
The government knew monitors would turn up improprieties, but
believes
that it has nothing to hide, and much to gain, from honest criticism.
In fact, Hedegaard
believes
that cutting emissions has become so easy that European leaders should be more ambitious and unilaterally aim for a 30% reduction below the 1990 level – an idea that has won support from David Cameron’s new British government.
He
believes
in international cooperation, rather than the might-is-right philosophy of the Bush-Cheney era.
Instead, the Americans have their own ideas about how to achieve a breakthrough, especially with Israel, which the Obama administration
believes
is now the major obstacle.
The West no longer
believes
anything he says.
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