Calls
in sentence
2192 examples of Calls in a sentence
To be sure, Germany is justified in rejecting narrow-minded
calls
by France and Italy for unconditional fiscal expansion.
One wonders how many people have to die before Mélenchon
calls
a spade a spade, and acknowledges that Maduro’s security forces are no different from those that sowed terror in Chile and Argentina not too long ago.
A vicious circle of deleveraging, plummeting asset prices, and margin
calls
is underway.
On US Interest RatesThe first US interest rate increase since June 2006 is a pivotal moment for the global economy, launching what Mohamed El-Erian, Chief Economic Adviser at Allianz,
calls
the “great policy divergence,” with repercussions in every region and financial market.
Gita Gopinath of Harvard University objects to what she
calls
the Fed’s “dollar distraction,” whereby US policymakers have deviated from their inflation-fighting mandate because of unnecessary concern about the dollar’s strength.
Putin’s insistence on the health of the Russian economy
calls
to mind his own joke.
But while some commentatorsseem to presume that slower growth
calls
for monetary easing, protectionist measures also increase prices, which has the opposite implication for monetary policy.
That
calls
for a legal system that can adjudicate disputes and ensure fair, equitable, and timely treatment.
Finally, the FMLC
calls
for the establishment of a permanent G-20 secretariat to improve continuity and coordination across G-20 presidencies.
The American made a firm, explicit and apparently sincere commitment to lobby as strongly as possibly for what he
calls
“comprehensive immigration reform” and what in Mexico is commonly known as “the whole enchilada.”
The declaration
calls
for girls to be given access to quality education and age-appropriate health services and information; be counted as equal citizens; have meaningful economic opportunities; and benefit from laws that protect them, rather than discriminate against them.
Many of the
calls
to resist further construction, residents must understand, are being made by special interests; indeed, they amount to a kind of rent seeking by homeowners seeking to boost their own homes’ resale value.
We live in an age of complexity, and sound leadership in the Middle East, as everywhere around the world,
calls
for a wholesale shift in how we think about collaborative engagement for the future.
Facing economic stagnation and what Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei
calls
“the anarchy of weapons,” a succession struggle is the last thing Palestinians need.
Of course, the logic behind
calls
to restrict our freedoms has a simplistic appeal: extremists use our freedoms to commit their crimes, so preventing the abuse of freedom requires curtailing freedom’s scope.
Last, but not least, combating identity-based extremism
calls
for a greater capacity to integrate all those who live within the EU.
The Financial Roots of the Eurozone SurplusLONDON – In December 2017, the eurozone’s current-account surplus reached an all-time high of €391 billion ($483 billion), prompting the usual
calls
for Germany to “do more” to resolve the imbalance through fiscal policy.
It is still early in what Anne-Marie Slaughter
calls
an “American Renewal” or David Brooks, who chairs a new Aspen Institute project on community,
calls
an “American Renaissance,” yet it is already clear that many Americans are ready for a fresh national narrative.
The young may be taking the lead – what Obama
calls
“a revolution from the bottom up” – but there is little opposition from today’s parents.
But it has recently been revived, with the emergence of the “circular economy” concept, which
calls
for the continual re-exploitation of resources through the reuse and refurbishment of products, components, and materials.
As the world heads toward catastrophic levels of resource depletion and environmental degradation,
calls
for a new economic model – whether green, blue, circular, or something else –will only grow louder.
We need to put aside crowd-pleasing
calls
for President Bashar al-Assad’s removal (though obviously he must go) and work harder with international partners, including Russia and China – both of which should, quite frankly, rank higher than Syria in terms of their importance to US foreign policy.
This, by itself,
calls
for a review of the overall efficacy of inflation-targeting.
China’s 12th Five-Year Plan, which will take effect in 2012, recognizes these policy imperatives and
calls
for several measures to fulfill them, including wage increases for urban workers; income support for rural households; enhanced access to capital for small businesses, especially in the underbuilt services sector; and more generous social-welfare programs, which would reduce Chinese households’ high levels of precautionary saving.
At the heart of the proposals is EU support in the UN Security Council for a resolution that “either (1)
calls
for new negotiations and sets a mandatory deadline for the completion of an agreement to establish a two-state solution, or (2) creates a greater equivalence between the Israeli and Palestinian parties, including through recognition of a Palestinian state and strong support for Palestine accession to international treaties and organizations.”
The flamboyant, jewelry-bedecked Singh
calls
himself Baba Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh Insan – a compound of Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh names, followed by the word for “Human” in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu.
Asia’s new security landscape places a premium on seamless cooperation among US allies – a prospect that the sustained bickering between South Korea and Japan
calls
into question.
A New Growth Path for Europe supports that optimism, and it
calls
on the EU to act accordingly.
American political philosopher Elizabeth Anderson
calls
this the standard of democratic equality.
Grillo regularly
calls
the premier “Rigor Montis,” and has depicted him lying in a coffin.
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