Counterparts
in sentence
705 examples of Counterparts in a sentence
Smaller BN parties in Sabah have quit the bloc to challenge PH’s local ally, while their
counterparts
in neighboring Sarawak are contemplating doing the same.
Women who have completed secondary or tertiary education are more likely to enter and remain in the labor market than their less educated
counterparts.
Moreover, countries that have committed to ratifying the 1997 UN Watercourses Convention – which establishes basic standards for the use and conservation of waters that cross international boundaries – must compel their uncommitted
counterparts
to follow their lead.
He thinks that America’s $500 billion trade deficit with China amounts to a loss, the result of “incompetent” US administrations allowing their Chinese
counterparts
to take advantage of them.
They had also shared information with their
counterparts
in other countries.
When their initial gathering ends, they will host their
counterparts
from across the region, including US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
To a large extent, Helmut Kohl held up the same picture, which he used to persuade his European
counterparts
that they should rush to bind Germany to a more integrated Europe.
These same companies not only pay higher salaries than their American counterparts, but account for 11.3% of capital investment in the US and provide 14.8% of its private-sector R&D.
If Macron wins – a distinct possibility – he will need to deliver change, as will his
counterparts
elsewhere in Europe.
Last year, it was at the MSC that key members of US President Donald Trump’s administration first met their global
counterparts.
Furthermore, social environments that are characterized by lower levels of consensus and higher levels of violence may be more likely than their more harmonious
counterparts
to catalyze radical innovation.
What distinguishes these social democratic governments from their populist
counterparts
is that they are composed of a left that is integrated into competitive, multi-party democracies.
Why is it that today’s smaller and more educated urbanized families in emerging-market economies are so much less productive than their
counterparts
were a half-century ago in today’s rich countries?
The Democratic Party insurgency, led by Senator Bernie Sanders, opposed Hillary Clinton for much the same reason their right-wing
counterparts
did: with her well-paid speeches at Goldman Sachs, she was viewed as a representative of the Wall Street-linked globalized elite.
Caught between their lack of long-term strategic vision and their obsession with short-term interests, Europe’s political leaders have largely failed to win the respect of their Asian counterparts, in contrast to European companies, which are faring much better in Asian eyes.
Partitioned ethnicities are also much more likely than their non-partitioned
counterparts
to face institutionalized discrimination from the national government (25%, compared to 15%).
These bankrupt women are better educated than their male counterparts: most have some college; and more than half own their own homes.
Though centrist and right-wing resistance organizations also existed, they were incomparable to their communist-driven
counterparts
on the left, in terms of both size and influence.
Why do US fiscal conservatives care so little about government debt, relative to their
counterparts
in other countries?
In either case, the effects of their choice – like the choices of their American
counterparts
– will be felt by countless others.
In India a decade ago, students who chose careers in public service could expect lifetime earnings of between a fifth to a third of their private sector
counterparts.
As huge winners from globalization, they want to avoid criticism of their trade and financial policies, which arguably remain considerably more protectionist than those of their rich-country
counterparts.
It is instructive to hear the baffled reactions of European leaders like Germany’s Angela Merkel, France’s Nicolas Sarkozy, and Britain’s Gordon Brown as their developing-country
counterparts
served notice of their refusal to consign their populations to continued poverty in order to solve a problem that the rich countries created.
But so were many Western communitarians and few people in the West realized that their
counterparts
in Eastern Europe read Hayek's "spontaneous order" and communitarian ideas of membership in local communities in ways that did not sit well with the model of democratic revolution envisaged by the West.
And, if Yuan has his way, China’s universities would increasingly look like their North Korean counterparts, rather than world-class Western institutions.
This breeds arrogance and a sense of smug superiority over their
counterparts
– policymakers who must balance multiple, complicated agendas.
Chinese diplomats now maintain closer relations with think tanks than their European
counterparts
do, and are praised for their constructive contribution to the public debate.
In recent years, Chinese companies have been suffering piracy related problems just as their foreign
counterparts
have.
Even the US Federal Reserve, which is presiding over an economy that is performing far better than its developed-world counterparts, has reiterated the need for "patience" when it comes to raising interest rates.
In this sense, it is critical to recognize the fundamental difference between “urban villages” and their rural
counterparts.
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