Cited
in sentence
302 examples of Cited in a sentence
In 1987-1988, South Korea’s current-account surplus climbed above 6% of GDP, with currency manipulation often
cited
for the rise in external saving.
As Germany does not have its own currency, it is also a stretch to suggest that it benefits from currency manipulation (though the ECB’s quantitative easing policies have been
cited
in that context).
He then
cited
empirical work suggesting that financial deepening is useful only in the early stages of economic development, evidence of a negative correlation between financial deepening and real investment, and the withering conclusion of Adair Turner, Britain’s former top financial regulator: “There is no clear evidence that the growth in the scale and complexity of the financial system in the rich developed world over the last 20 to 30 years has driven increased growth or stability.”
This is one element of the “state capture of the media” that the eight Nation columnists
cited
in resigning.
The second commonly
cited
cause of Germany’s resilience to populism is its economic strength.
Culture is too often
cited
as a defence against human rights by authoritarians who crush culture whenever it suits them.
Likewise, in last year's ruling striking down a Texas prohibition on same-sex sodomy, the Court
cited
a 1967 Act of the English Parliament and a 1981 ruling of the European Court of Human Rights.
In fact, he is the sixth most widely
cited
monetary economist, owing his renown especially to the Taylor rule, a guideline for setting interest rates in response to observed inflation and growth.
There is only one problem: Chinese people do not seem to want to consume, at least according to commonly
cited
data.
This largely explains why Germany is routinely
cited
as an example of a strong, “competitive” economy.
China was
cited
as the main challenger to “American power, influence, and interests,” an adversary that is “attempting to erode American security and prosperity.”
The largest number (22%) answered “moral values,” comparison to 20% who
cited
the economy and 19% who mentioned terrorism.
The final reason
cited
in support of excluding a currency chapter from the TPP is that the countries negotiating the deal would never agree.
Although the authors used an untenable benchmark to determine that the sensitivity of pay to performance was too low, the article was published in a top economic journal, prominently discussed in the Harvard Business Review, and is one of the most
cited
papers in economics.
The paper was published in a minor journal and is not very well
cited.
In their widely
cited
paper “Growth in a Time of Debt,” Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart argue that, when government debt exceeds 90% of GDP, countries suffer slower economic growth.
He
cited
research by former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, who, more than 20 years ago, warned that as US multinational companies shifted employment and production abroad, their interests were diverging from the country’s economic interests.
The total number of deaths that Snyder attributes to Stalin is lower than the commonly
cited
figure of 20 million, which was estimated before historians had access to the Soviet archives.
But Imanishi's writings are rarely, if ever,
cited.
They share signage with military units; enjoy better housing than military personnel; run the food services; and import Southeast Asian workers to build the gigantic infrastructure, which was new when I visited in 2009 (calling into question the “deterioration”
cited
to justify the latest cash infusion).
In his speech, Flake
cited
the Republican president Theodore Roosevelt as the model of “conscience and principle” to which he aspires.
After all, GDP grew at around 5% annually in Tunisia over the last 20 years, and the country was often
cited
as boasting one of the better-performing economies, particularly within the region.
China has also employed “lawfare,” selectively invoking a colonial-era accord, while ignoring its own violations –
cited
by Bhutan and India – of more recent bilateral agreements.
Probably the single most telling statistic I
cited
was that the minimum wage (the wage earned by the median worker) measured in the cheapest available calorie, had declined from 52,854 calories per day in May 2012 to just 7,005 by May 2017 – not enough to feed a family of five.
According to the World Bank’s much
cited
“dollar-a-day” international poverty line, which was revised in 2008 to $1.25 a day in 2005 prices, there are still 1.4 billion people living in poverty, down from 1.9 billion in 1981.
Advocates of economic liberalization policies
cited
the success of the rapidly industrializing East Asian economies.
As Summers well knows, I published a widely
cited
commentary in The New York Times on November 29, 2008, entitled “A $1 Trillion Answer.”
In a sign of unity, a council of Sunni Muslim scholars in the eastern city of Lahore issued a fatwa, signed by 50 clerics, saying that the justifications
cited
by the girl’s attackers were “deviant” and had no basis in Islamic law.
Indeed, Germany’s success is frequently
cited
as a model that other countries should emulate, and rightly so.
In a 2014 speech, Steve Bannon, Trump’s chief strategist,
cited
the Fascist Italian philosopher Julius Evola, who argued that “changing the system is not a question of contesting and polemicizing, but of blowing everything up.”
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