Contrast
in sentence
2680 examples of Contrast in a sentence
Europe, by contrast, put early emphasis on restoring fiscal sustainability, but neglected its private-sector maladies.
By contrast, Cameron will face 27 distinct countries (including Croatia, which will join later this year), many of which are facing serious domestic challenges.
Jimmy Carter’s administration, by contrast, never overcame its problems, and is now regarded as a dismal failure.
The world's poorest countries, by contrast, hardly innovate at all.
In the Nordic countries, by contrast, the poorest 20% of households receive nearly 10% of total income, putting them at roughly one-half of the national average.
In contrast, Trump is pitting the US against its Asian allies.
By contrast, if the returns are uncorrelated, it is extremely unlikely that they will all default at the same time, making overcollateralization sufficient to guarantee a safer return.
By contrast, the European Union is heading toward the type of long-lasting stagnation from which Japan is desperate to escape.
In
contrast
to Europe, the United States is emerging as the developed world’s strongest economy.
But, in
contrast
to the Chinese conundrum, which will come to a head in the next few years, the absence of global governance may continue indefinitely.
Though it has long been clear that Western polities rely on both, the contrast, however artificial, is now front and center once again.
In contrast, the EU is once again showing itself to be irresolute and riven by internal divisions on both the Israeli-Palestinian peace process (or lack thereof) and the Arab upheavals.
By contrast, they work very badly when viewed as a policy framework.
Sovereign borrowing is also expected to decline, in stark
contrast
to last year’s record-high bond issuance.
Reactions in Europe, by contrast, were meager or non-existent.
Compassion, by contrast, is concern for another person that is linked to a strong motivation to alleviate their suffering.
By contrast, “surge funding” would enable the EU to respond more effectively to some of the most dangerous consequences, by helping to tip the economic, political, and social dynamics away from xenophobia and disaffection toward constructive outcomes that benefit refugees and countries alike.
By contrast, euroization so far has required a fair degree of prior fiscal consolidation, a credible and independent monetary policy, reasonably competitive financial institutions, and flexible labor markets.
Today’s professional economists, by contrast, have studied almost nothing but economics.
The
contrast
between overregulated democracy and unregulated bankers did not go unnoticed.
In
contrast
to Globalization 1.0, which was largely confined to the cross-border exchange of tangible (manufactured) goods, the scope of Globalization 2.0 is far broader, including growing trade in many so-called intangibles – once nontradable services.
The sharpest
contrast
between the two waves of globalization is in the speed of technology absorption and disruption.
Now, by contrast, an article shared by a friend or family member from The New York Times may not look all that different than one from a conspiracy theorist’s blog.
In
contrast
to 1929, credits are not now being throttled; on the contrary, public money is being pumped into banks and the economy.
In contrast, Francis is not only clearly progressive, refusing even to speak ill of homosexuals; he has repeatedly called for a peaceful solution in Syria.
By contrast, the Fed doesn’t have to recognize the loss; while free-market advocates might talk about the virtues of market pricing and “price discovery,” the Fed can pretend that nothing has happened.
By contrast, an open society accepts uncertainty, and it establishes laws and institutions that allow people with divergent views and interests to live together in peace.
By contrast, just 24% of Greens are over 60.
Together with the fact that worldwide production of goods and services has been rising by more than 3%, this means that the trade-to-GDP ratio has been falling, in
contrast
to its steady upward march in earlier years.
By contrast, Greece piled up an enormous fiscal and external debt in boom times, until markets said “enough" in 2009.
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