Consequences
in sentence
3627 examples of Consequences in a sentence
Over the years “avoiding…the ultimate consequences” through limitations butted against the bitter legacy of the surprise attacks suffered by both the US and Russia in World War II.
The other is that they will resort to neither, and that no alternative growth engines will have been started, leading to an extended slowdown with unpredictable political
consequences
at home and serious economic
consequences
abroad.
Countries like Greece, Italy, and arguably Portugal over-borrowed, and now their citizens face severe
consequences.
But the bankers face no
consequences
whatsoever for over-lending.
The
consequences
for the real economy will be comparable only to the financial crisis of 2007-2008.
I am convinced that as the
consequences
of Brexit unfold in the weeks and months ahead, more and more people will join us.
The
consequences
of any innovation for productivity, employment, and equity ultimately depend on how quickly it diffuses through labor and product markets.
We see the
consequences
in the “premature deindustrialization” of the developing world today.
Ultimately, it is the economy-wide productivity
consequences
of technological innovation, not innovation per se, that lifts living standards.
Moreover, alternative approaches to stimulate private demand might have fewer undesirable distributional consequences, as MGI has discussed.
If the last superpower abandons these virtues, the world – all of us – will have to confront the
consequences.
Latin America’s Corruption ChallengeCOPENHAGEN -- It is difficult to distinguish the
consequences
from the causes of the corruption that bedevils many Latin American and Caribbean nations.
That would be a tragic mistake, with far-reaching geopolitical
consequences.
There can be two, very different Asian centuries, and the one that emerges will have profound
consequences
for the region’s peoples and governments – and for the world.
But they shouldn’t be able to ignore the constraints of arithmetic, especially not when the same sleight of hand has been tried before – with profoundly adverse
consequences.
In this environment, distributing largesse financed by the central bank would have dangerous systemic
consequences
in the long run, because it would create perverse incentives for everyone involved.
All of this would raise expectations among financial-market actors that central banks and governments would always step in to smooth out credit bubbles and mitigate their consequences, even if that meant accumulating more debt.
We can expect that the Polish government, heedless of the economic or geopolitical consequences, will now veto European Council measures, obstruct and boycott summits, and violate EU law.
That would mean a catastrophic loss of state revenues for today’s major Arab oil-producing countries, rendering them highly vulnerable to the compounding
consequences
of existing water shortages, rapid demographic expansion, climate change, and declining crop yields.
Whatever the reason, the fact is that as long as humans fail to organize a collective and comprehensive defense, infectious diseases will continue to wreak havoc – with disastrous
consequences.
The
consequences
are dire.
EU leaders focus narrowly on limiting short-term financial and political costs, rather than thinking strategically about broader longer-term
consequences.
Europe’s Necessary UnionBRUSSELS – The
consequences
of Europe’s debt crisis are all too present throughout much of the European Union, as distressed economies attempt to stabilize and grow at the same time.
The question now is whether the government will be unnerved by the poorest quarterly growth performance in three years and usher in a large stimulus package, with the
consequences
that China has experienced whenever such a package is implemented.
The
consequences
of this radicalization are spreading throughout the region and worldwide.
But now that he is taking action to reduce America’s bilateral trade deficit with China, there could be grave
consequences
for the world economy.
To avoid negative political consequences, Germany agreed to be underrepresented in weighted voting on EU matters – an imbalance in its own right that was not substantially corrected until the Lisbon Treaty entered into effect in 2009.
France is still burdened by the
consequences
of its “no” vote in 2005 on the proposed European Constitution – clearly not its finest hour.
As bad politics block economic opportunity, public trust in governments will continue to erode – with serious potential
consequences
for political systems, and the economies they administer, worldwide.
This sense of disempowerment is threatening to turn the developing world’s youth bulge into a youth curse – with serious potential
consequences.
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