Byproduct
in sentence
67 examples of Byproduct in a sentence
It also induces us to save and invest as a prerequisite to indulging our love of gambling, and as a
byproduct
of it.
Indeed, tighter liquidity conditions and increased volatility in financial markets are the
byproduct
of the reversal in the long cycle of foreign purchases.
A
byproduct
of China’s spectacular growth has been rising economic tensions with other countries.
Beyond the enormous human suffering and loss of life, the most immediate
byproduct
of the region’s turmoil is the potential for more severe and frequent terrorism – both in the Middle East and emanating from it.
Rather than seeing shame as an unfortunate
byproduct
of living in poverty, human development planners should consider how poverty undermines human dignity.
The second feature of the digital information age – a direct
byproduct
of democratization – is information socialization.
But what they have done is encourage their own radicals – a natural
byproduct
of Wahhabism, Saudi Arabia’s fundamentalist brand of Islam – to commit their terrorist acts elsewhere.
Avoiding deflation – and thus sustaining economic recovery – would seem to depend on one of two scenarios: either a rapid reversal in the fall of energy prices, or a deliberate policy to raise output and employment by means of public investment (which, as a byproduct, would bring about a rise in prices).
The first concern – American job losses to China – is viewed as a
byproduct
of China’s trade surpluses, which the US has typically sought to remedy by advocating for renminbi revaluation.
This disturbing development – a
byproduct
of the failed “global war on drugs” – threatens to reverse recent economic and social gains in our region.
A second important factor has been slow growth in the advanced economies, a
byproduct
of the financial crisis that is likely to persist for some time to come.
The rising atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide, a
byproduct
of burning fossil fuels, would warm the planet and change rainfall and storm patterns and raise sea levels.
The Case for Higher Estate TaxesWASHINGTON, DC – According to conventional wisdom, inequality is an inevitable
byproduct
of strong economic growth.
The unfortunate
byproduct
of this self-reinforcing cycle of non-compliance and delegitimation is damage to the global economy in general, and, in particular, to the developing countries that are most in need of foreign investment.
The legislation was not intended to ban derivatives, but only to bar implicit government guarantees, subsidized by taxpayers (remember the $180 billion AIG bailout?), which are not a natural or inevitable
byproduct
of lending.
Death is, of course, a foreseeable consequence of avoiding that burden, but it is a
byproduct
that is not directly intended.
The desire to live in a liberal democracy is, indeed, something acquired over time, often as a
byproduct
of successful modernization.
This is a natural
byproduct
of consolidating our democracy.
A
byproduct
of this strategy, combined with ongoing Palestinian attacks, has been growing international sympathy with Israel.
The first Chinese factor is the authorities’ focus on “urbanization” as an end in itself, rather than as a
byproduct
of industrialization.
Emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that accumulates in the atmosphere and is a major cause of rising temperatures, is a
byproduct
of a wide range of normal economic activities.
As it turned out, after 40 years of containment, the Soviet Union and its empire unraveled, though this outcome was a
byproduct
of US policy, not its principal purpose.
Another important
byproduct
was China’s use of the occasion to launch its new regional investment bank and $40 billion Silk Road development fund.
The growing gap is partly a simple
byproduct
of innovation and entrepreneurship.
As a
byproduct
of globalization, crises that once burned locally and then quickly flamed out now risk sparking international conflagrations.
Is the denial of a vulnerable population’s right to food an acceptable
byproduct
of a trade deal?
An open society will never be created or sustained by righteous entrepreneurs or be the mere
byproduct
of political engineering.
Europe’s inflation problem was a
byproduct
of its central banks’ reluctance to tighten policy more aggressively, and European countries’ hesitancy to let their currencies rise, reflecting their long-standing commitment to export-led growth.
Hormesis is a
byproduct
of evolution.
And the
byproduct
will be not just slower growth, but a significant fall in national incomes for all but perhaps the largest and most diversified economies.
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