Correct
in sentence
1292 examples of Correct in a sentence
Alternatively, can “politically correct” behavior be a form of recklessness, to the extent that it evades difficult issues and focuses on what is easier to justify rather than what is right?
Ferguson is
correct
that the US will have to come to terms with its budget deficit to maintain international confidence, but, as I show in my book The Future of Power, doing so is within the range of possible outcomes.
The new generation of researchers must be given the skills and values – not just scientific ideals, but also awareness of human weaknesses – that will enable it to
correct
its forebears’ mistakes.
Others who had inspired (if that is the
correct
word) the totalitarian menaces of the 20th century had long been dead by the time their ideas came to fruition.
Instead, annual growth has averaged 2.3% (or 2.2%, if estimates for the first half of 2016 are correct).
But I argued that this was irrelevant: making up the states' shortfall would cost the government nothing if the optimists turned out to be right, but it would be just the right medicine if pessimists like me were
correct.
But the deeper reason is the
correct
perception that the resulting current-account deficits are not “benign” when they are being financed by inflows of short-term capital, or “hot” money.
And there’s no sign he will...”Noonan is not quite
correct.
Clearly, Machiavelli was correct: for a political leader, the people’s contempt is worse than their hatred.
Discussion of China’s currency focuses around the need to shrink the country’s trade surplus and
correct
global macroeconomic imbalances.
Yet, in the euro crisis, the center’s responsibility is even greater than it was in 1982 or 1997: it designed a flawed currency system and failed to
correct
the defects.
In my judgment, the authorities have a three-month window during which they could still
correct
their mistakes and reverse current trends.
When the German people become aware of the consequences – one hopes not too late – they will want to
correct
the defects in the euro's design.
This is correct, and it will clearly cause problems in low-lying countries like Bangladesh.
If this interpretation is correct, the contrast between the dynamism of the US and the small countries in Northern Europe on the one hand, and the stagnation of the large EU countries on the other hand, is likely to become starker.
I see the left as being
correct
– this time – in the global economy’s post-industrial North Atlantic core.
This argument is
correct
in the sense that it is the current-account surplus or deficit of a monetary union as a whole that can be expected to have exchange-rate implications.
Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic magazine is mostly
correct
that Trump has thrown Obama’s caution to the wind.
This will not
correct
the imbalances that exist today.
While Yellen’s arguments are correct, the Fed’s entitlement to participate in international negotiations does not oblige it to do so, and a new appointee might argue that it should not.
Basing American monetary policy on domestic business conditions, rather than on the exchange rate, is
correct.
It was the CDS market that allowed the negative – and
correct
– view of the housing market held by John Paulson and others finally to be embedded into market prices.
To
correct
this, China needs to boost its people’s sense of future financial security and affect a rise in private income commensurate with GDP growth.
That impression is
correct
to some extent.
At the time, I wrote that, if Vilkovisky were correct, accepted ideas about black-hole physics would have to be radically altered, and “black holes created at CERN might actually survive long enough to be taken seriously.”
And the subsequent decision by the European Central Bank to purchase more than €1 trillion ($1.14 trillion) in eurozone governments’ bonds, though
correct
and necessary, has dimmed confidence further.
Countries that run chronic external surpluses, like China, and countries whose currencies are widely used internationally, like the US, do not face the same pressure as other countries to
correct
their policies when economic imbalances arise.
They called for a process to ensure that when the warning lights flashed yellow, the country in question would be compelled to
correct
its policies.
The real price of oil seemed to be lagging behind, and oil producers’ dramatic actions in 1973 were part of an effort to
correct
that.
But that label is not quite
correct.
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