Choices
in sentence
1580 examples of Choices in a sentence
When provided with simple and clear information, people will make the right
choices.
Many people are willing to do their bit for the environment, but they do not always have the opportunity to consume in environmentally friendly ways, because sustainable low-carbon
choices
are more expensive and harder to find.
Since 1980, trade deficits have been dismissed as the outcome of free-market
choices.
Various considerations typically underlie policy
choices
in such situations.
Moreover, fiscally responsible reforms involve hard choices, and tend to work only if they are drafted with a spirit of shared sacrifice: “I will give up my cherished benefit, if you give up yours.”
But hard
choices
are inevitable if democracy is to prevail.
And, in fact, a person writing an algorithm – calmly, in advance – might make smarter
choices
than one who is watching prices plunge in real time.
The
choices
they make will depend on how they weigh the risks of bloating their balance sheets, imposing costs on banks and consumers, pursuing possibly unattainable inflation targets, and hurting debtors and producers at home.
The second approach allows drivers to make their own choices, even if this means that they will have to slow down or stop on occasion.
But whether bucking revealed preferences embedded in private and public investment
choices
would make us individually and collectively “better off” is dubious, at best.
And, when they do, they appropriately reward or penalize firms for their governance
choices.
Americans have few
choices
but to discover a form of modesty appropriate to the country's reduced status in the eyes of the world.
They are held accountable for their
choices
by voters, other elected officials (in the form of parliamentary scrutiny), and independent media.
Naturally, politicians are reluctant to face up to
choices
between the unacceptable (permanent stagnation), the unthinkable (leaving the euro), and the hard-to-do (reform).
When researchers show that some of our supposedly carefully considered
choices
and attitudes can be influenced by irrelevant factors like the color of the wall, the smell of the room, or the presence of a dispenser of hand sanitizer, their findings are published in psychology journals and may even make headlines in the popular media.
Blanchard insists that now is the time for “tough choices, and tough commitments to be made on both sides.”
But the Greeks have already made tough
choices.
But the subsequent and last stage brings us to the current moment, when economic policy
choices
have again resulted in a widening of the distribution of gains in the global north, ushering in a new Gilded Age.
Even before his inauguration, Trump was trying to influence companies’
choices
about manufacturing locations, including by threatening import tariffs on products manufactured in, say, Mexico.
Harvard’s Rafael Di Tella has shown that the fundamental determinant of public policy
choices
is the public’s beliefs.
They can also make better
choices
about mobilizing returns, and avoid the traditional routes of tax increases, debt-financed spending, or austerity.
But the determinants of such
choices
are often removed from people’s immediate control.
Vigorous political reporting is vital to democracy, because it enables voters to understand the issues and evaluate their
choices.
He does at least recognize that only Argentina is responsible for the bad policy
choices
that led to today's morass.
Second, unlike national democracies, the EU does not derive its legitimacy from the process through which political
choices
are made, but mainly from the output it can deliver.
Syriza was forced to accept tough
choices
because Greece depends on external financial assistance.
As several health ministers pointed out in Addis Ababa, high vaccine prices force poor countries’ governments to make tough
choices
about which deadly diseases they can afford to prevent.
When they are breached, the typical result is a sense of unfairness, followed by resistance and, ultimately, political
choices
that address the inequality, though sometimes in counter-productive, growth-impeding ways.
The IPCC report also underscores what some development experts and economists have been saying for years: energy
choices
should take into account wider benefits.
Several governments – including that of the United Kingdom – have developed so-called “nudge units,” which seek to encourage people to make better
choices
for themselves and society by providing subtle hints, cues, and other suggestions.
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