Constraints
in sentence
995 examples of Constraints in a sentence
These three measures, if applied to all banks, would eliminate the need for special rules governing liquidity or funding (which would remain open to supervisory review, but not to binding constraints).
Thus, while cultivating energy would create new constraints, it would also open new possibilities for many economic actors.
Anyone looking closely at Europe’s complex options for extricating itself from its debt straightjacket should realize that political
constraints
will be a huge obstacle no matter which route Europe takes.
First, most references to Friedman’s argument overlook his recognition of
constraints
on business behavior.
Some ethical constraints, such as basic human rights, reflect universal values; others vary across time, location, and situations.
Bosnia and Herzegovina, for example, is still wrestling with the
constraints
of the Dayton peace accords.
But once the political franchise was enlarged, the working class got organized, and mass politics became the norm, domestic economic objectives began to compete with (and overwhelm) external rules and
constraints.
Households, corporations, financial institutions, and governments are all facing balance-sheet constraints, which it seems plausible to assume, are holding back expenditure and investment, elevating savings, and contributing to a broadly deflationary environment.
So how do we ensure that these imperatives are fulfilled, despite demographic and environmental
constraints?
Under these conditions, Trump’s biggest and boldest policy proposals will likely run into budgetary
constraints.
They argue that regulatory
constraints
make it difficult for them to adjust to changes in technology and product demand, and that this in turn lowers their efficiency, raises their costs and, as a result, deters job creation.
Most ordinary Syrians face extremely difficult economic and social conditions, including high unemployment, rising food prices,
constraints
on personal freedom, and endemic corruption.
The political debt
constraints
that the eurozone’s members had self-imposed were never taken seriously after that, because the sinners and the judges were one and the same.
Because each society has a unique set of characteristics,
constraints
and goals, policies are necessarily idiosyncratic: the path is made by walking.
Hollande’s program, meanwhile, implies that pain can be avoided altogether by loosening European
constraints.
Those who claim that “political union” is necessary for the eurozone appear to focus on the second feature, despite the fact that fiscal
constraints
on local governments are clearly a typical and important component of single states.
Finally, rigid labor markets and, more generally, regulatory
constraints
on prices and on the supply response of the economy, deepen recessionary reactions to various shocks, and contribute to the growth of unemployment.
This requires moving away from the broad governance agenda and focusing on reforms of specific institutions in order to target binding
constraints
on growth.
Poor countries suffer from a multitude of growth constraints, and effective reforms address the most binding among them.
It is not necessary, because what really works in practice is removing successive binding constraints, whether they are supply incentives in agriculture, infrastructure bottlenecks, or high credit costs.
Governance writ small focuses instead on those institutional arrangements that can best relax the
constraints
on growth.
It can also be good for growth when it is targeted at binding
constraints.
Yes, populism is an approach to economic policy that refuses to acknowledge the existence of budget
constraints.
Yet, in an environment of low long-term interest rates and deficient short-term aggregate demand (which means there is little risk of crowding out the private sector), it is a mistake not to relax fiscal
constraints
for investment.
Their politicians cite budget
constraints
and the need to prioritize domestic programs over fighting diseases that disproportionately kill the world’s poorest.
Contrary to popular belief, the
constraints
on the production and use of basic data stem not from a shortage of technical capacity and knowhow, but from underlying political and systemic challenges.
The People’s Bank of China has been providing spurts of liquidity to the market, in the hope of relieving financial
constraints
on productive private businesses and industries.
Given that the private sector is generally significantly more productive than SOEs or LGFVs, generating much higher returns on investment, the absence of hard budget
constraints
on troubled SOEs clearly must be addressed.
A better approach would regard fiscal and external balances as medium-run
constraints.
The best-designed policies are always contingent on local conditions, making use of pre-existing advantages and seeking to overcome domestic
constraints.
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