Benefits
in sentence
4904 examples of Benefits in a sentence
But, without a strong foundation at the primary level, secondary-school students find it difficult to succeed, graduate, and reap the
benefits.
The
benefits
of a monetary union based on a stable macroeconomic framework and governed by an independent central bank are manifest: the euro area has enjoyed low inflation and low interest rates for much of the last decade, a boost in trade and investment, and rapid integration of financial markets.
Second, the euro area
benefits
from an independent European Central Bank whose swift actions to ease liquidity constraints and coordinate monetary policy have recently helped to avert a financial meltdown.
Such are the EMU’s
benefits
that the visible costs of remaining a non-member are beginning to recast the political debate surrounding euro adoption in several countries.
In a potentially more volatile twenty-first century global economy, we must reap the maximum
benefits
of economic integration in terms of growth and jobs.
The Partnership for Polio Eradication Project in Nigeria and Pakistan – launched in 2003 by the World Bank, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Rotary International, and the United Nations Foundation – is a prime example of how a buy-down program can concentrate global efforts on a single issue and yield
benefits
for all parties.
Despite the potential benefits, the many unanswered questions about buy-downs limit their application.
Economic globalization has, of course, produced some large
benefits
for the world, including the rapid spread of advanced technologies such as the Internet and mobile telephony.
Since implementing this approach, Rwanda has managed to decrease the percentage of people living in extreme poverty from 40% of the population in 2000 to 16.3% in 2015Aside from the obvious benefits, these gains matter because, as UNICEF recently noteda country’s potential return on investment in social services for vulnerable children is two times greater when the
benefits
reach the most vulnerable.
Clearly, Israel faces a multitude of new foreign-policy opportunities, which offer far-reaching potential
benefits.
Productivity gains had stalled, energy prices were high, the backlog of potential technologies that originated in the Great Depression had been exhausted, and waning
benefits
from economies of scale led nearly every economist to project that economic growth would be slower in the future than it had been in the past.
Advocates of monetary stimulation sometimes argue that it is preferable because it is more neutral in its distributional effects, and that its
benefits
are spread more widely.
China
benefits
from the United Nations system, where it has a veto in the Security Council.
Thus far, however, Chinese behavior has sought not to overthrow the liberal world order from which it benefits, but to increase its influence within it.
The Elusive
Benefits
of Flexible Exchange RatesCAMBRIDGE – In 1953, Milton Friedman published an essay called “The Case for Flexible Exchange Rates,” arguing that they cushion an economy from internal and external shocks by bringing about just the right price changes required to keep the economy at full employment.
Most politicians know that sound economics would call for these
benefits
to be eliminated; but those who complain the loudest that the government must not pick corporate winners and losers seem to be the least able to summon the political will to act.
Moreover, in educating the public we confront formidable forces: cultural icons who are as bronze as the statuary in the Louvre, the sheer pleasure of being in the sun, and the perceived incremental health
benefits
of ultraviolet radiation.
Regulatory competition thus degenerates into a race to the bottom, since the
benefits
of lax regulation translate into profits at home, while the losses lie with bank creditors around the world.
Even so, these countries’ geographic proximity to Europe enhances the
benefits
from trade and financial integration.
These voters generally do not reject the
benefits
of technologies that result from modern science, but they do reject the evidence and advice of scientists regarding public policies.
The impact on China’s competitiveness of rising real wages – which have been increasing by more than 15% annually since 2008 – will, the country’s leaders expect, ultimately be offset by the
benefits
of productivity-led growth, not to mention the much-needed increase in domestic consumption.
Similarly, from a global perspective, opening trade can contribute to the world’s overall economic growth, but does not guarantee that the
benefits
will be fairly distributed among countries.
Still, the uneven distribution of the
benefits
created by a global trade opening means that some countries, especially the least developed, gain little in comparative terms, and are possibly even hurt.
Grasping these
benefits
is potentially one of this generation’s greatest challenges.
Recast as after calculating the net present value of the stream of future benefits, a realistic Doha outcome could increase global income by more than $3000 billion per year, $2500 billion of which would go to the developing world.
Yet the
benefits
of a successful Doha round are between 45 and 440 times higher than these costs.
If trade liberalization in goods and services proves too politically difficult to achieve in this decade, the
benefits
of liberalizing international labor flows is worth contemplating – not least because otherwise illegal migration is likely to increase.
We examined the costs and
benefits
of an expansion in international migration over a 25-year period, amounting to a 3% boost in host countries’ labor forces by 2025.
The
benefits
are between 28 and 220 times higher than the costs.
The inclusion in Part II of the draft on "social rights" - such as the right not to be unjustly dismissed, or the right to receive old-age pensions, unemployment compensation, and health
benefits
(regardless of cost) - is in no way necessary to the functioning of the whole.
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