Concerns
in sentence
2610 examples of Concerns in a sentence
The Fed apparently could not stomach the sell-off in global financial markets in January and February, which was driven largely by
concerns
about further tightening.
In reality, this memory problem
concerns
ordinary absentmindedness that emerges in the wake of trauma; it does not refer to an inability to remember the trauma itself.
Emerging markets know this, and are upset – Brazil has vehemently expressed its
concerns
– not only about the increased value of their currency, but that the influx of money risks fueling asset bubbles or triggering inflation.
To be sure, each of these
concerns
may be legitimate.
In the short term, there are
concerns
that oil production will peak soon, owing not to the unavailability of reserves, but to obstacles to investment – for example, access to reserves, sanctions, and policy uncertainty.
But the US government has always regarded them as domestic American issues rather than as key foreign-policy
concerns.
The most serious current case
concerns
President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
These shared values are the glue that binds governments together in the recognition that clinging to pure self-interest is no longer reasonable when common
concerns
call for a common strategy.
The fourth uncertainty arises from voters’
concerns
over immigration and the extent to which any new EU trading arrangement must be conditional on restricting the free movement of workers.
An eighth and even greater uncertainty, however,
concerns
Britain’s future global role.
The anti-EU and anti-immigrant Le Pen must not be the only French presidential candidate addressing these
concerns.
Moreover, despite some
concerns
about capital outflows, China's consolidated net foreign-asset position, which stands at $1.7 trillion (17.6% of GDP), remains sufficient to sustain China through this tough transition.
China's leaders recognize the long-term imperative of serious institutional reform, even as
concerns
about slowing growth heighten the temptation to embrace short-term fixes.
One of the most significant problems
concerns
taxation of US corporations’ foreign-earned income.
The first reactions have been mostly negative, because of specific
concerns
such as wage indexation in Belgium or because the EU institutions want to preserve their legal prerogatives.
After a few exasperated editorials, the world has pretty much dropped the subject and gone back to its usual
concerns.
The crux of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, by contrast, only partly
concerns
Israel’s borders.
But having Macri’s chief of staff seated at the table during the announcement, alongside the economic team, raised
concerns
of political meddling.
With
concerns
over emerging-market creditworthiness making a comeback, Argentina and Turkey were first in line to take the hit.
While Indian officials are often discreet in public about relations with China, and wisely want bilateral trade and investment to grow, their security
concerns
remain acute.
The reasons for this have not changed: rising demand for energy, alongside
concerns
about climate change, volatile fossil-fuel prices, and the security of energy supplies.
Nonetheless,
concerns
about the future of clean tech have made new projects more difficult to finance.
In Europe, the
concerns
of voters about animal welfare have been effective in influencing members of national parliaments, as well as members of the European Parliament, resulting in national legislation and EU directives that respond to those
concerns.
In the US, by contrast, similar
concerns
have had no discernible effect on members of Congress.
When a resurgent Russia began to generate
concerns
among the Alliance’s eastern members, it revised its forward posture to reassure them.
These prohibitions are based not just on the need to protect human embryos, but also on
concerns
relating to the availability of donated egg cells, on which parthenogenesis depends – an issue that neither the courts nor the patent office have considered.
But, as is true of many political leaders, especially on the nationalistic right, they are chauvinistic provincials whose
concerns
are almost entirely domestic.
Both movements are rooted in economic
concerns.
Yet the privatization of intelligence raises many larger
concerns
familiar to the debates over private military and security companies (PMSCs).
What is wrong is that those
concerns
and policies are driven largely by anger over Putin’s own nationalism, rather than by a careful consideration of the diplomatic and strategic milieu.
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