Concerns
in sentence
2610 examples of Concerns in a sentence
Many “privacy”
concerns
are based on concrete interests, such as preserving financial security or obscuring information that could compromise one’s employment or ability to qualify for affordable health insurance.
Partly, it addresses safety, cleanliness, and how to charge for one’s work; but it also
concerns
respect for plumbers and the dignity of the individuals taking the course.
We share these
concerns.
Numerous other countries, notably European Union members, share our
concerns.
There are also
concerns
over excessive debt and related fears of a fragile banking system; worries about the ever-present property bubble collapsing; and, most important, the presumed lack of meaningful progress on economic rebalancing – the long-awaited shift from a lopsided export- and investment-led growth model to one driven by internal private consumption.
For example, the UK and the US may be adopting approaches that differ with respect to protecting commercial banks from more speculative, proprietary trading, but the policy
concerns
are broadly similar – and may not be so pressing elsewhere, where banking traditions are different and trading is more restrained.
When 40 leading Republican foreign policymakers and national-security experts signed a letter expressing their opposition to Trump, whom they fear would be “the most reckless president in American history,” their
concerns
were largely disregarded.
Major reasons why researchers hesitate to share their data, according to the same survey, include intellectual property or confidentiality issues, fears about misinterpretation or misuse of their work, or
concerns
that their research would be scooped.
The pace of urbanization should dispel Western doubts stemming from
concerns
over so-called ghost cities and chronic over-investment.
A well-developed “eco-city” framework was presented at this year’s Forum to counter both concerns, and features incentives promoting a new urbanization model that stresses compact land usage, mixed modes of local transportation, lighter building materials, and non-carbon energy sources.
But if foreign powers wish to engage constructively, they must understand a country’s internal politics and demographics, and address all affected groups’ security
concerns
equally and fairly.
Indeed, it seems that only retiring central bankers, such as Mervyn King of the Bank of England, are willing to raise
concerns
publicly.
In fact, his initiative to counter the Soviet deployment of SS-20 intermediate-range nuclear missiles, a plan he set out in a major speech in 1977, was motivated above all by
concerns
about a potential decoupling of Europe and its US ally.
A third initiative
concerns
renewable-energy development.
Fortunately, a framework already exists that supports these
concerns.
Global investors have become more risk-averse in response to expectations of tighter monetary conditions in the United States and Europe, as well as
concerns
about China’s slowing growth and its negative effects on global demand and commodity prices.
Right now, sentiment is decidedly bearish, reflecting
concerns
about slowing growth, excessive buildup of local-government debt, and possible defaults in the shadow banking sector.
These concerns, while understandable, are misplaced.
In Europe and Japan, for example, monetary and fiscal policies have been tightening in response to domestic concerns, further slowing the world economy.
But, given that most major economies operate under a flexible exchange-rate regime, these
concerns
are largely unwarranted.
America’s biggest strategic blunder in the Middle East arguably
concerns
the emergence of Iranian power.
What gives trade particular political salience is that it often raises fairness
concerns
in ways that the other major contributor to inequality – technology – does not.
But trade rules that are more sensitive to social and equity
concerns
in the advanced countries are not inherently in conflict with economic growth in poor countries.
The former need to restructure their economies and promote new industries, and the latter must address domestic
concerns
over inequality and distributive justice.
Seventh, let us hope that new policies targeting information and communication technology (ICT) strike the right balance among all stakeholders’ competing and legitimate
concerns.
Keynes’s central
concerns
for his own time ring true today.
This brings us to Tocqueville, who wrote almost two centuries ago, but whose central
concerns
never went away.
While these
concerns
are undoubtedly valid, the broader question is whether protesting, boycotting, or banning such events encourages or impedes social and political change.
Concerns
such as these are likely to increase as China emerges as a formidable development player.
Mexico and the US must be sensitive to domestic political
concerns
in both countries.
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