Choices
in sentence
1580 examples of Choices in a sentence
Health, nutrition, and education may seem like obvious choices; more surprisingly, there is a strong case for making broadband access a top priority.
My think tank, the Copenhagen Consensus, has asked 60 teams of economists, including several Nobel laureates, to investigate which targets would do the most good for every dollar spent, to help this meeting make the best
choices.
But they can often frame the
choices
and broker coalitions to push the existing boundaries of European integration.
The German way of diplomacy consisted of avoiding hard
choices
between Paris and Washington, Moscow and Warsaw, the EU and NATO, big neighbors and small ones.
And much of what we may be called on to do in the future will likely be determined by
choices
made by others.
In addition to the
choices
that these and other countries make, America’s own
choices
will be an important factor determining what kind of future it faces.
It was possible to experience being a refugee through a virtual reality headset, – or through the actual experience of donning a headscarf and spending 75 minutes being treated like a refugee and facing heart-wrenching
choices
in a simulation created by the Crossroads Foundation.
If almost everyone agrees that more investment is needed to elevate and sustain growth, but most believe that someone else should pay for it, investment will fall victim to a burden-sharing impasse – reflected in the political process, electoral choices, and the formulation of fiscal-stabilization measures.
If Obama can make a difference, it is not because of his policy choices, but because of what he is.
Fortunately, the Ebola outbreak is unlikely to expose Americans fully to the poor fiscal
choices
of the past decade.
For those countries that have already made the leap, the
choices
are more difficult.
Joseph E. Stiglitz’s book Re-Writing the Rules of the American Economy: An Agenda for Growth and Shared Prosperity blames political
choices
for both slowing growth and rising inequality.
Ultimately, however, political
choices
will determine whether the diffusion of artificial intelligence leads to widespread increases in median incomes or exacerbates polarization and inequality.
Battleground BudgetMILAN – The world’s developed economies, of which the United States is by far the largest and systemically most important, face a range of difficult political and social
choices.
President Barack Obama’s proposed US budget acknowledges and addresses those
choices
and tradeoffs directly and fully for the first time in the post-crisis period.
These trends cannot be blamed entirely on poor policy
choices
or shortsighted government.
This brings us to the
choices
that Obama’s budget embodies.
So
choices
have to be made.
It is an invitation to the US Congress and the American public to acknowledge and address the
choices
and tradeoffs that are needed to establish a sustainable pattern of economic growth – and to ensure a fair distribution of the burden of getting there.
The
choices
are more extreme in countries where the imbalances are more severe and markets suffer more policy-induced impediments to the private-sector flexibility, mobility, and dynamism that continue to benefit the US.
The most successful public policies and fiscal
choices
are those that are not only guided by the enduring values embedded in the social contract, but that are also adapted to changing demographic, technological, and global circumstances.
That sometime means making hard
choices
of the type that the US and many other developed countries are facing now.
If we make these
choices
poorly, growth will suffer and future distributional
choices
will be far more painful.
The country is caught between two choices: progressive reform or continuing paralysis and decay.
While the latter is an understandable expense historically, the time has come for the EU and G8 to make different political
choices
that help keep 3.5 million mothers and children alive and well.
These five pillars involve drastic choices, but they will probably require less money from Europe’s taxpayers, not more.
In the coming years, she will face the economic crisis, increasing unemployment, mounting public debt, and demographic challenges at home, as well as tough foreign-policy
choices
in Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan and the Middle East.
Likewise, Obama and Romney may have tacitly agreed not to discuss the policy
choices
surrounding the tragedy in Syria, because neither has any interest in addressing its internal complexities, mastery of which will be essential to galvanize international support for an eventual political solution.
As a result, the West’s strategic
choices
appear inherently anti-Islamic to countless of its young Muslims.
They must also ensure that career
choices
are as open to their Muslim citizens as they are to everyone else.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
About
Policy
People
Which
There
Making
Other
Political
Would
Should
Economic
World
Could
Between
Movie
Difficult
Different
Think
Better