Continues
in sentence
2213 examples of Continues in a sentence
Yet psychiatry
continues
to inhabit medicine's netherworld - within the mainstream clinically, outside it scientifically.
Yet Japan
continues
to work inside a linguistic bubble – not least because many firms in Japan are oriented toward the domestic market and pay little heed to global trends.
To be sure, the promise of traditional health care will always be compelling as long as technological progress
continues
to enhance health infrastructure and service delivery.
The decline of US influence, and the strengthening of China’s strategic clout,
continues
unabated.
But if the world
continues
to deny Iran’s involvement in Yemen, and the threat that this poses to Saudi Arabia, the Kingdom will have little choice but to remain in Yemen.
This flies in the face of conventional thinking, which
continues
to claim that mandating carbon reductions – through cap-and-trade or a carbon tax – is the only way to combat climate change.
Again, there is no limit to how much money the ECB can recycle, provided Portuguese banks remain solvent – which they will, so long as the ECB
continues
to buy Portuguese government bonds.
Natural gas is much more environmentally friendly than coal, which
continues
to be the mainstay of electricity production around the world and in the UK.
If this trend continues, in 2050, governance systems will be even more poorly equipped to deal with the fundamental problems of perpetual population and consumption growth or wealth inequality.
Nationalism
continues
to produce powerful political “antibodies” to American and European meddling in other countries’ internal affairs.
The US naively
continues
to view the Middle East as an object of manipulation, whether for oil or for other purposes.
After Hong Kong, the list
continues
with Sydney (12.2),
As the Fourth Industrial Revolution continues, four principles should guide the region’s policies and their implementation.
As the demand for education, health care, and other public services
continues
to grow, social pressures will continue to mount.
Free capital mobility
continues
to be the ultimate goal, even if some countries may have to take their time getting there.
There is no doubt that Iran – with its long history of secrecy and dissimulation – deserves the intense hostility and distrust that its nuclear program
continues
to engender.
It is a lesson that needs relearning today, as the world economy
continues
to struggle to find a more solid foundation for growth and escape the shadow of the 2008-2009 crisis.
The great paradox is that if the rise of identity politics continues, governments will be even less able to address the problems that are fueling it.
“US inflation
continues
to run below the Committee’s 2% objective,” she said, and the current “high degree of policy accommodation remains appropriate to foster further improvement in labor market conditions and to promote a return of inflation toward 2% over the medium term.”
The US and Japan might be among the last to face the wrath of the bond-market vigilantes: the dollar is the main global reserve currency, and foreign-reserve accumulation – mostly US government bills and bonds –
continues
at a rapid pace.
This is a global problem – an estimated 294 billion e-mails were sent daily in 2010, and the figure
continues
to increase.
While Europe’s reputation for foreign-policy “softness”
continues
to shape Iranian perceptions, the EU’s role in compelling Iran to negotiate underpins the current talks.
Second, the eurozone’s bailout bill
continues
to rise.
Like Egypt’s war of attrition, the eurozone’s underlying economic, financial, and social ferment
continues.
The combination of an Asian market with strong Chinese connections and a system of English law and property rights
continues
to provide a powerful competitive advantage.
Russia is in no position to create an alternative international system; but, if Putin
continues
to pursue an outdated and antagonistic foreign policy, it can undermine the existing one.
As economic growth
continues
to pick up while interest rates lag, at least outside the US, fiscal authorities will have further opportunities to reduce debt, and create fiscal space for stimulus measures when the next cyclical downturn inevitably arrives.
Meanwhile, the oldest dispute in the region – the subject of a decades-long peace process that moves nowhere –
continues
to fester and worsen in Palestine and Israel.
If Russia
continues
on its current path toward becoming solely a raw-materials producer, it will not only become increasingly vulnerable to global energy-price fluctuations, but its scientific, cultural, and educational potential will decay further, eventually stripping the country of its global clout.
Here in the US, it might seem like an image of our future, as public debt comes perilously close to 100% of annual GDP and
continues
to rise.
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