Consequences
in sentence
3627 examples of Consequences in a sentence
Taking this tool away could have severe adverse
consequences.
According to China’s spokesman, allowing the Dalai Lama to visit Arunachal Pradesh could harm bilateral relations, with India “facing the consequences.”
And the arguments used by its congressional proxies would be risible had the
consequences
not been so tragic.
Few, it seems, considered the potential
consequences
of their participation.
He has weathered serious challenges and experienced firsthand the
consequences
of political and economic policies gone awry.
Such action will probably have to wait until the political
consequences
of low growth, high inequality, mistrust of international trade and investment, and the loss of central-bank independence become too great to bear.
But what is true of international diplomacy – that a series of seemingly reasonable decisions can have cataclysmic
consequences
if no one bothers to figure out the endgame – is equally true of international finance.
US President Barack Obama’s administration is now being forced to face up to the
consequences
of its own fatal mistake in Syria.
And the Wikileaks Web site points out that while openness may lead to some highly visible bad consequences, what we fail to see are the
consequences
of not publishing, and the way in which a climate of openness makes it more likely that governments and corporations will act more ethically.
After all, the
consequences
of failing to increase the debt ceiling would be catastrophic.
The causes of rising income and wealth inequality are multiple and nuanced; but the unintended
consequences
of the recent unprecedented period of ultra-loose monetary policy deserves a chunk of the blame.
Superficially, the international economic
consequences
of Trump seem remarkably benign.
Frontloading the spending would allow us to address the most dangerous
consequences
of the crisis – including anti-immigrant sentiment in receiving countries and despondency and marginalization among refugees – more effectively.
But if any troubled southern European economy fails to roll over its debt in the coming months, the resulting contagion will spread quickly from the eurozone throughout the global financial system, with
consequences
far more grave than what followed Lehman Brothers’ collapse in September 2008.
Voters’ aversion to Brexit’s adverse consequences, analogous to the realism that gradually dawned in Greece after its 2015 referendum rejected an EU bailout, helps to explain the otherwise perplexing tactics of Prime Minister Theresa May and her Conservative Party.
We will not win it unless we fight its root causes as well as its ghastly
consequences.
The security debate has understandably often focused on the
consequences.
The
consequences
of war are encountered everywhere, nowhere more so than for those caught in the crossfire.
While companies like Monsanto argue that pesticides are necessary to ensure food security, the
consequences
of chemical exposure to workers like Tomasi – whose body was left twisted and mangled after years of handling chemicals without protection – reveal the human cost of their use.
As a result, “banks should become more resilient and financially stable,” the
consequences
of which “should be seen in fewer bank failures and more consistent credit provision.”
There is no reason why that cannot be achieved – the overall balance sheet of China, Inc. remains strong – but the domestic distributional
consequences
will require careful management.
But, early in the process, mechanization brought negative consequences, like unemployment, child labor, and environmental degradation.
Then US and Chinese leaders can turn their attention to the broader problem of avoiding the Thucydides Trap, thereby preventing a clash with
consequences
that would dwarf those of a trade war.
She replied that government policies often had unexpected negative
consequences
in other areas –
consequences
that sometimes canceled out, or even exceeded, positive effects.
It ignores what the country has accomplished, and it risks
consequences
that are inconsistent with what the critics themselves want to see.
It would also require countries to protect nuclear facilities against acts of sabotage, which could have
consequences
similar to those of nuclear accidents.
Indeed, failure to publish research results is by far the most common and worrying form of scientific and ethical misconduct in health research – and it has had lethal
consequences.
In any case, the political
consequences
overshadow legal or bureaucratic issues.
Finally, concerted international action to mitigate the
consequences
of food insecurity is crucial.
Although it is acknowledged in Jerusalem that an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would involve grave and hard-to-assess risks, the choice between acceptance of an Iranian bomb and an attempt at its military destruction, with all the attendant consequences, is clear.
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