Characterized
in sentence
576 examples of Characterized in a sentence
The Fed’s experience – shaped by a historically decentralized power structure – highlights the benefits of a policymaking process
characterized
by diverse views.
The isolationism that
characterized
America's 1994 congressional elections is forgotten.
The global economic environment –
characterized
by massive amounts of liquidity and low interest rates stemming from unconventional monetary policy in advanced economies – led most emerging economies to use their policy space to build up existing drivers of growth, rather than develop new ones.
Manmohan Singh’s decade of disastrous leadership has been
characterized
by weakness and decay.
Taxes were evaded on a massive scale, and the welfare state was
characterized
by endemic waste.
Reagan
characterized
the Soviet Union as an “evil empire” and increased defense spending to challenge Soviet aggression and capabilities.
The good news is that the economies of the Arab Awakening countries do not suffer from the deep distortions that
characterized
post-communist Europe.
A leading contender in Sri Lanka’s upcoming election is former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, whose nine-year tenure, which ended in January with a shock defeat in the presidential election, was
characterized
by rising authoritarianism, nepotism, and corruption.
In the emerging multipolar world,
characterized
by sovereignty concerns and strategic competition, progress toward resolving global issues will be more difficult than ever – with potentially devastating consequences.
Today’s ultra-flexible labor markets,
characterized
by part-time, temporary, and zero-hours contracts, are very different from those that generated cost-push inflation in the 1960s and 1970s.
This process –
characterized
by experimentation, assessment, and adjustment – emerged from the CCP’s military experience of the 1930s, was applied by Deng Xiaoping to his reform program in the 1980s, and has been refined by subsequent Chinese leaders.
In Europe, the debate is
characterized
by dissent and division, exemplified by the United Kingdom’s recent vote to leave the European Union – an outcome that was shaped largely by overblown fears about immigration.
The challenge is to apply these insights in a world
characterized
by global economic interdependence, major imbalances, and a worsening growth and employment problem.
The other type of community is
characterized
by, first, the redistribution of resources among countries and, second, by majority decision-making.
Singh’s fourth principle is that, both because of and despite all of the above, the bilateral relationship will be
characterized
by elements of both cooperation and competition.
By contrast, the innovation supply chain (the process by which companies obtain and/or develop future products and improve on their current products) tends to be
characterized
by inefficiency, ambiguity, and competition.
But, more important, Japan is adjusting to meet the challenges of a rapidly changing regional environment,
characterized
by rising geopolitical competition with China.
While the development of Chinese long-range missile and nuclear forces has traditionally been
characterized
as conservative, incremental, and slow, it has taken place against a backdrop of steadily growing official emphasis on the country’s defense-industrial complex, particularly its aerospace sector.
In a fast-changing geopolitical and economic environment –
characterized
by challenges like interest-rate rises spurred by high debt levels; competitive corporate-tax reductions; changing immigration patterns; and a possible slowdown in the pace of globalization – small countries must be able to identify and assess risks, and adjust their strategies accordingly.
At a time of strong and growing market competition, he must provide the kind of visionary leadership that
characterized
his father and grandfather, the company’s pioneering founder, who transformed a small local trading company into a global semiconductor and smartphone powerhouse.
Over the last quarter-century, rapid technology-driven globalization –
characterized
by the physical and virtual integration of the global economy, including the opening of world markets – has contributed to the fastest increase in incomes and population in history.
For its part, the government should open a dialogue with them,
characterized
by mutual respect and transparency.
Second, empirical evidence is rarely reliable enough to settle decisively a controversy
characterized
by deeply divided opinion.
These groups are
characterized
by economic nativism, anti-immigration and protectionist leanings, religious fanaticism, and geopolitical isolationism.
Since 2010, I have been emphasizing the key role played by policy in keeping rates low in a post-crisis era
characterized
by large overhangs of public and private debt in the advanced economies and a tendency toward deflation.
Modern production systems, in which information technology plays an increasingly crucial role, are totally different from the large factory floors that
characterized
the birth of trade unionism and social democracy.
Because konzo was initially
characterized
as a pure upper-motor neuron disease confined to motor pathways in the central nervous system, it was suggested that the cognitive effects were minimal.
One can only imagine the endemic nepotism and corruption that have traditionally
characterized
Libya’s police forces, but they will need to be made adequately operational quickly, probably via a new loyalty oath and some crash training.
Like the turbulence last summer, the current bout of market pressure is mainly affecting economies
characterized
by either domestic political tensions or economic imbalances.
Others are
characterized
by high inflation (even above the central-bank target, as in Turkey, India, Indonesia, and Brazil).
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