Bound
in sentence
1385 examples of Bound in a sentence
In other words, the returns to capital were
bound
to fall as it became more abundant relative to population.
If Turkey’s downward spiral generates a new wave of refugees
bound
for Europe, further destabilizing the European Union, all the better.
That is one reason why today's negotiations on Ukraine are
bound
to achieve only patchy, short-lived truces, not the kind of long-term solution that was reached after the Bosnian War.
Although
bound
to be controversial, especially in an election year in the United States, enough flexibility should be given to the renminbi in both directions when it is needed.
If appreciation does not reduce the current-account surplus and capital inflows, then the renminbi’s exchange rate is
bound
to face further upward pressure.
They view China as special, a re-emerging great power
bound
to join the ranks of the world’s most advanced countries, and the governance practices that their newspapers cite as models are invariably those of rich societies, not developing ones.
The European elite needs to revert to the principles that guided the Union’s creation, recognizing that our understanding of reality is inherently imperfect, and that perceptions are
bound
to be biased and institutions flawed.
Although the size of many R&D organizations is
bound
to be reduced by such reforms, the complexities of managing and maximizing the impact of this external web of relationships will demand new skills and capabilities over and above those of excellent science.
Each country’s regulatory body will have to issue their own regulations that are within the
bound
the Directive.
Turmoil in Arab societies is
bound
to persist for years to come, and emerging regional and world powers can be expected to exploit the international order’s fragmentation to advance their interests in the region.
It is that commitment by which the government is now
bound.
With consumption and investment lagging, the US economy is
bound
to stagnate.
Under such circumstances, the lack of response at the zero
bound
of policy interest rates is hardly surprising.
This is
bound
to outstrip the ability of many societies and ecosystems to adapt.
In other words, from this perspective, the world’s two richest and most powerful economic spaces, the European Union and the US, are
bound
to be rivals, even when they are allies.
Western Europe evolved from a “Community” to a “Union,” and its states became less firmly
bound
to American protection.
Should Assad fall, and the Sunni-led opposition rise to power, the ensuing balance of power in Syria is
bound
to reshape the balance of power in Lebanon.
European business is
bound
up in rules and regulations, many of which originate from unelected officials in Brussels, whose laudable intention to harmonize business conditions across the EU is instead sapping the continent’s commercial creativity and dynamism.
The first casualty is
bound
to be the European Stability and Growth Pact, with its plethora of fiscal rules, monitoring procedures, and eventual sanctions for excessive deficits.
Like a bad driver, a nation that looks left and right but never ahead is
bound
to crash.
The risk they face is clear enough: absent a profound reengineering, inertial spending – owing to entitlements and civil-service wages – is
bound
to crowd out spending on new priorities and new policies.
Another consequence is that regulatory competition is likely to increase in Europe, as companies are less
bound
by local interests to keep their headquarters at “home” if the tax or regulatory environment becomes unfavorable.
Whereas riparian neighbors in Southeast and South Asia are
bound
by water pacts that they have negotiated between themselves, China does not have a single water treaty with any co-riparian country.
Those disputes are
bound
to worsen, given China’s new focus on erecting mega-dams, best symbolized by its latest addition on the Mekong – the 4,200-megawatt Xiaowan Dam, which dwarfs Paris’s Eiffel Tower in height – and a 38,000-megawatt dam planned on the Brahmaputra at Metog, close to the disputed border with India.
External observers are
bound
to try to read policy messages between the lines of any publication, which may not always help the bank to achieve its objectives.
For decades, the Franco-German alliance
bound
Europe together and drove it forward.
There is
bound
to be some contagion from one function to another.
The third issue on Obama’s mind is
bound
to be China’s asserted goal of dominating Asia and excluding the US from the region.
Clearly, this was not the case with the European Central Bank, which kept running up against the now infamous zero lower
bound
on nominal interest rates.
Moreover, states are not legally
bound
to change the policies or laws that are deemed to be violating their international human-rights obligations.
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