Contrast
in sentence
2680 examples of Contrast in a sentence
Unless the Roma are well educated and socially integrated – in stark
contrast
to today’s reality – these countries’ economic future is bleak.
By contrast, South Korea’s 1997 bailout package – which was larger than those received by Indonesia, Thailand, or the Philippines – totaled $57 billion, with $21 billion coming from the IMF.
Greece, by contrast, has utterly failed to engineer a recovery.
At the same time, China’s recent efforts to build the institutions of an alternative financial architecture – spearheaded by the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the New (BRICS) Development Bank – stand in sharp
contrast
to an increasingly inward-looking US.
By contrast, their greatest failures have come from funding grandiose projects that benefit the current elite, but do not properly balance environmental, social, and development priorities.
The pragmatic commitment to growth that one sees in Asia and other emerging markets today stands in
contrast
to the West’s misguided policies, which, driven by a combination of ideology and vested interests, almost seem to reflect a commitment not to grow.
By contrast, the “70-80” scenario seems increasingly likely.
By contrast, the world’s oldest democracy, the US, has yet to elect a president who is not white, male, and Christian.
By contrast, the United States and the European Union account for 54% of global GDP, despite having only 12% of the world’s population.
In
contrast
to the United States, however, the boost in consumer demand has not become an engine of growth.
Needless to say, however, there is a stark
contrast
between her advocacy of austerity and her decisions at the height of the refugee crisis.
By contrast, most social-network email is not just unstructured, but almost actively obscure.
In
contrast
to the People’s Republic of 40 years ago – a rural, agrarian country emerging from the Cultural Revolution – today’s China is an economic and political superpower with a rapidly urbanizing and technologically advanced society.
The US economy is staging a more convincing recovery than the UK, and, in
contrast
to the Bank of England and the European Central Bank, the Fed is not explicitly mandated by Congress to achieve a specific inflation target.
By contrast, countries in Central and Eastern Europe had development policies thrust upon them by the European Union – a dynamic that has contributed significantly to the rise of anti-establishment political forces.
By contrast, those who predict generally high real interest rates over the next generation point to low savings rates in the US, high spending driven by demographic burdens in Europe, and feckless governments running chronic deficits and unsustainable fiscal policies.
Conservatives, by contrast, are unyielding on this point, believing that there is but one path to God, and that salvation comes only through following Islamic teachings.
In contrast, only Saudi Arabia can flood the market and reduce prices far below their current level.
By contrast, working with entrepreneurs to build their companies for the long term and strengthen their competitive legs allows capital to stay invested and reduces the risk that turnover creates.
By contrast, the Fed is widely expected to raise rates at the end this month, so there will be no surprise element.
By contrast, sophisticated investors, such as big stock market players, are unlikely to fall prey to this trap.
In
contrast
to Britain, there is nothing like the threat to dissolve parliament.
By contrast, youth unemployment contributes relatively much more (about 40%) to overall unemployment in countries like Sweden and the UK.
By contrast, the credibility associated with pursuing only an inflation target builds on itself.
By contrast, when you die from the absence of prevention policies, you may be dying sooner than you otherwise would, but you are not being left to die.
But the
contrast
between bank profitability and the woes of everyone else turns up the political heat on the central banks, which have to explain why it is only their “friends,” the banks, who are standing under the helicopter when it drops money.
The search for deep human roots of the crisis, by contrast, leads to attempts to change human nature, which are futile – and also inherently much more dangerous.
Turkey’s government has delivered more than $8 billion in aid; by contrast, the EU has delivered only a small share of the €3.2 billion ($3.6 billion) it pledged last November.
This is a poor way to cope with uncertainty, and it stands in striking
contrast
to the methods of science and free inquiry.
Academia, by contrast, appears to be moving in the opposite direction.
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