Concerns
in sentence
2610 examples of Concerns in a sentence
The best way to deal with the economic, political, and humanitarian
concerns
raised by trade agreements is via transition rules, temporary income support, and retraining, as opposed to maintaining protectionist barriers.
It is vital to remove non-tariff barriers, such as localized rules and restrictions not based on scientifically legitimate safety or health concerns, despite political pressure to maintain or tighten them.
The first
concerns
how much importance, in absolute and relative terms, the nominee assigns to foreign policy.
The last question
concerns
the nominees’ approach to the execution of foreign policy.
Lately,
concerns
about America’s unsustainable fiscal deficits have, likewise, resulted in ugly political infighting, almost leading to a government shutdown.
Serious Harm By ResearchThe media, legislators, and other organizations often raise
concerns
about human-rights violations and ethical breaches in clinical research.
(The recently leaked minutes of the ECB’s Governing Council meetings highlight the differences between Draghi and Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann’s views, adding to operational
concerns
about OMT.)
Some argue passionately that now is no time to worry about future debt problems, but, in my view, any realistic assessment of the medium-term risks does not permit us simply to dismiss such
concerns.
Mr Verheugen argued that a referendum would force Germany’s political élite to take more account of the
concerns
of the people, which they failed to do when taking Germany into the single European currency.
Over the past few months, the German, French, and British governments have been frantically assembling a package of measures – including potential sanctions on Iranian elites – to address Trump’s
concerns.
Given the pervasiveness of Chinese-made goods, China’s safety record
concerns
consumers worldwide.
This can pit global consumer interests against local citizen interests, as it has along the Mississippi River, where fertilizer runoff from one of the world’s breadbaskets is contributing to
concerns
about water quality.
More recently,
concerns
about pollution, climate change, and the finite nature of fossil fuels has driven a spike in demand – one that must now be managed.
If the Democrats hope to retake control of the House of Representatives, they will need a platform that addresses voters’ economic
concerns
– particularly the
concerns
of many voters who elected Trump in the first place.
The first
concerns
the sustainability of public finances in a number of euro-zone member states.
Several countries have indeed already expressed
concerns.
Finally, Islamic financial institutions must address
concerns
about liquidity-risk management, compliance with Basel III (the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision’s most recent global regulatory standard), international accounting standards, and corporate governance.
But, while the industry faces the threat of inflated gas prices from around the world, its
concerns
closer to home are the abundance of EU and national energy regulations.
There are also growing
concerns
over emerging markets such as Turkey, Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico, and over the threat posed by populist governments in Italy and other European countries.
Today, however, Afghanistan is the scene not only of the War on Terror, but also of longstanding Afghan-Pakistani disputes, the India-Pakistan conflict, domestic struggles in Pakistan, US-Iranian antagonism, Russian
concerns
about NATO, Sunni-Shia rivalry, and struggles over regional energy infrastructure.
All across the continent, right-wing populist parties are gaining ground by exploiting voters’
concerns
about migration and access to the welfare state.
But this policy mix raises several
concerns.
By contrast, today’s
concerns
are economic.
Round one ended in November 2011, when German Chancellor Angela Merkel and then-French President Nicolas Sarkozy leveraged financial-market
concerns
to force former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi out of office.
It’s energy- and environmentally- friendly at a time when
concerns
about global warming are growing.
But America’s questionable means of satisfying its legitimate security
concerns
are certainly less damaging for Europe in the long run than is Chinese industrial espionage.
But the most astonishing thing that Francis has said, in a recent letter to the Italian newspaper La Repubblica,
concerns
non-believers.
But White and I share deep
concerns
about its long-term effects.
And yet it is not clear that White, sharing my
concerns
about the impact of funded fiscal deficits or of ultra-easy monetary policy, has convincing alternative proposals that could return us to shore.
But if we commit to recapitalize banks with debt-financed fiscal expenditure, we may simply shift solvency
concerns
from banks to sovereigns, reinforcing one of the most pernicious dynamics in the evolution of the eurozone crisis.
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