Considers
in sentence
341 examples of Considers in a sentence
But what China
considers
a defensive imperative could be perceived as aggressive and expansionist by its neighbors and the United States.
The answer depends on whether one
considers
the time women in Europe spend on domestic work.
Of course, holding the sun in a bottle is no small challenge, especially when one
considers
that the systems must be engineered so that they can create electricity for a price consumers are willing to pay.
Step by step, whenever opportunities present themselves, the Kremlin is ready to use all means at its disposal to regain what it
considers
its own.
The so-called “neocolonialist school,” popular among China skeptics,
considers
China’s economic relationship with Africa as essentially imperial.
A natural self-delimitation of one sphere, however, does not mean that it
considers
itself to be better than other spheres, or that it defines itself in opposition to anyone else.
But when one
considers
the effects of “bracket creep,” the outlook for taxpayers worsens.
The reason we seem incapable of coming together to protect the climate is known as the “tragedy of the commons”: a shared resource tends to be rapidly depleted because no single actor – whether a country or a person –
considers
how their actions affect other users.
Japan no longer
considers
itself the “Far” East; rather, we are at the very center of the Pacific Rim, and a neighbor to the world’s growth center stretching from Southeast Asia to India.
The Obama administration
considers
both Iran and North Korea to be outside this category.
This is why the ECB must be very prudent as it
considers
whether to maintain the current pace of rate hikes, in which case it would raise rates by 25 basis points in September, or slow the pace down a bit, in which case the next rate hike would come in October at the earliest.
His actions suggest that he
considers
economic data to be far less important than security information – perhaps the natural attitude of a kleptocrat.
But Hamas has not taken what the US
considers
the critical step of recognizing Israel – and thus accepting a two-state solution.
I do not attribute any malign or sinister purposes to the OSCE presence in Albania, unless one
considers
inertia malign.
Indeed, Western policy-makers’ strong focus on persuading the Chinese authorities to permit greater appreciation of their currency is puzzling when one
considers
that Germany’s current-account surplus, as a share of GDP, is now much larger than China’s.
Indeed, there is no vaccine available for any of the three resistance threats that the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
considers
“urgent”: Clostridium difficile, carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae, and drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
But Israel’s current passivity – with all of its negative long-term consequences for the country – is likely to continue as long as Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
considers
his coalition’s survival more important than a decisive peace initiative.
Little wonder that Iranian envoy Saeed Jalili, after meeting Assad in Damascus recently, announced that “Iran will absolutely not allow the axis of resistance, of which it
considers
Syria to be a main pillar, to be broken in any way.”
More importantly, Russia
considers
these weapons insurance against the possibility of Chinese conventional superiority.
He looks at the “impact of technology on jobs” generally, and
considers
the stock-market valuation for highly profitable technology companies such as Google and Apple to be more than fair.
While the US breaks down problems and tries to find solutions for each part, China
considers
political problems unhurriedly, as an extended process that might have no resolution.
As a result, anyone who
considers
the status quo undesirable, unacceptable, or unsustainable has had to take an anti-European stance.
That dismal figure is all the more remarkable when one
considers
that 73% of global firms allegedly have equal-opportunity policies in place, according to a survey by the International Labour Organization (ILO).
Never before in the history of the Arab-Israeli conflict has a state that
considers
itself a leader of the Arab Muslim peoples backed Israel so openly.
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has insisted on paying an annual visit to the Yasukuni shrine, where Japan’s past aggressive wars are glorified, and where war criminals are among the buried, behavior that China’s government
considers
unacceptable.
Whereas the Saudis view the Brotherhood as an existential threat, Turkey
considers
it a model of Islamist politics worth defending and a means of expanding Turkish influence in the Arab world.
When one
considers
the low proportion of its gross income that the US gives as foreign aid, Trump’s decision becomes even more shameful.
The current economic-growth model
considers
the configuration of key factors of production – land, labor, capital, and total factor productivity (a measure of efficiency).
If one
considers
the issue of aid flows, one finds that though development aid rose in 2005 to $107 billion, most of the increase was geared towards “special circumstances,” such as debt forgiveness and for Iraq and Afghanistan.
At the G20 Summit in Hamburg last month, Trump already managed to isolate himself from the 19 other leaders, including Macri, by standing behind his decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement – a deal that virtually the entire international community
considers
irreversible.
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