Considers
in sentence
341 examples of Considers in a sentence
The Politics of Young and OldPARIS – If one
considers
some of today’s main challenges – including climate change, pensions, public debt, and the labor market – an obvious conclusion emerges: It is relatively much worse to be young today than it was a quarter-century ago.
But the difference between global principles and key national interests is often in the eye of the beholder: what the US
considers
an outrage may be viewed by other countries as a parochial American interest.
By asking for his advice, Trump is intimating to Kissinger that he
considers
him a man of the present, not the past.
The Bush administration’s reaction was uncharacteristically blunt, with its call for “Beijing to reconsider the passage of the law'” – a rather directly worded intrusion into what China
considers
to be an internal matter.
Foreign Policy magazine
considers
Sudan the country most at risk of state failure.
Some 2,000 Shia pilgrims gathered near the mosque that houses the Prophet’s tomb for the commemoration of Mohamed’s death, an act of worship that the ruling Saudi Wahhabi sect
considers
heretical and idolatrous.
The Belarusian government
considers
it to be Ukraine’s sovereign right to sign agreements with the EU – a flat contradiction of Russia’s stance – and appears likely to introduce customs fees of its own for electronic goods imported from Russia.
Yet, when one
considers
other successful efforts to improve public health over the last five decades – for example, smoking bans, seat-belt laws, and speed limits – one finds that legislation typically supplemented education.
Because the NBS
considers
the production approach to be more accurate in China, it seems likely that GDP by expenditure is not calculated independently, but instead uses GDP by production as a reference.
Sustainable ConvictionsWASHINGTON, DC – Achieving a more sustainable world presupposes a worldview that
considers
well-being not only in terms of income, but also in terms of human security and opportunities for every person to thrive.
Trump’s steel tariffs are even more mind-boggling when one
considers
that there is already overcapacity worldwide, much of which can be traced back to China.
Even universities, which are supposed to foster knowledge-sharing and spirited debate, are now suppressing it, for example by spinelessly rescinding speaking invitations to almost anyone that some group or another
considers
objectionable.
A similar choice now faces US President Barack Obama as he
considers
who should succeed Ben Bernanke as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
But when one
considers
today’s advanced-country malaise – years of stagnating or declining wages for average workers, growing income inequality, increasing productivity, and consumption supported by debt rather than income – there certainly seems to be ample reason to speculate.
Clearly, no government
considers
pushing down the price of any real good an effective way to stimulate the economy – any gain to consumers is a loss to producers, and the loss typically will outweigh the gain if the market price is a fair one.
For anyone who
considers
social, economic, and political challenges to be in urgent need of remedy – as I do – it makes sense that national sentiment would be revived to secure social cohesion in the service of a “social state.”
Ours is a civilization that accepts selfishness towards one's own family and group; that tolerates, with few exceptions, autonomy in moral matters; and that
considers
blasphemy, criticism of authority, and even civil disobedience fundamental freedoms.
When one
considers
the fights we are capable of having over oil, one shudders to imagine where a lack of water could lead.
The story gets more complicated when one
considers
the UN inquiry into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq al-Hariri.
In fact, poor coverage in the world’s richest countries should come as no great surprise, especially when one
considers
the demographics of those missing out.
Europe, it seems, underestimated Russia's determination to uphold what it
considers
a core interest in Ukraine.
Never mind that the Chinese renminbi has risen some 33% against the US dollar since mid-1995 to a level that the International Monetary Fund no longer
considers
undervalued, or that China’s current-account surplus has shrunk from 10% of GDP in 2007 to an estimated 2% in 2014.
But that does not mean that Xi
considers
this status to be permanent.
Although the agreement with Iran objectively makes Israel safer, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
considers
it a historic error.
Israeli hardliners cannot be sure that, at the end of the day, Obama will not find it necessary to change policies toward Israel in order to achieve this objective, for he
considers
it to be a strategic concern.
But Asia’s success should not be undersold, especially when one
considers
that Asia’s governments have used the recent financial crisis wisely, as an opportunity to reinforce the free market mechanism.
To be sure, Putin
considers
the Olympics – and, specifically, medals – to be very important.
If one
considers
the strategic ambitions of the separatists and their Russian patrons, Ukraine's prospects are even bleaker.
Once can understand the common interests of China and Britain: China is obsessed with an absolute territorial imperative: to restore what it
considers
to be the one and indivisible Chinese Motherland;Britain is obsessed with trade and commerce with China -- just as it was during the Opium Wars.
I was its founding chairman, and I don’t think anyone
considers
it a success.
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