Critics
in sentence
1600 examples of Critics in a sentence
China is not a party to the TPP, but Japan is, and many congressional
critics
cite it as the target of their insistence that provisions to prevent currency manipulation be included in the deal.
The euro, too, has depreciated significantly against the dollar over the last year, and some US trade
critics
want provisions to prevent currency manipulation added to the TTIP.
Critics
who accuse Japan and other countries of currency manipulation presumably know that they have not been intervening in the foreign-exchange market in recent years.
Block thought persists in part because its
critics
on each side are unknown to those on the other side.
When industrial factories were introduced in Europe in the nineteenth century, even staunch
critics
of capitalism such as Friedrich Engels acknowledged that mass production necessitated centralized authority, regardless of whether the economic system was capitalist or socialist.
This would appear to be an area where Trump will favor bilateral action, which would enable him to assuage his conservative
critics
by insisting that no US funds go toward family planning, while taking credit for any and all assistance.
Indeed, Abe has succeeded so well in returning Japan to the world stage that his US and Asian
critics
act as if the only problem now is to moderate Japanese self-confidence – a notion that would have been laughable just two years ago.
As most countries have started making serious investments in renewable energy, and many are implementing carbon prices and regulations,
critics
complain that such policies may undermine growth.
With political pressures encroaching on the bank’s policy decisions and a faux consensus, it is not surprising that there is now nostalgia in Frankfurt for earlier times and for Wim Duisenberg, even among his former
critics.
He was also one of the most vocal
critics
of censorship and other human-rights violations, which made him a dissident even during the liberal “Prague Spring” of 1968.
For years,
critics
have pointed to Europe’s “democratic deficit.”
Instead of engaging with sensible
critics
on the topic, the government has labeled its opponents “populists” and accused them of damaging “the image of Sweden.”
Critics
who argue that fiscal stimulus in Japan failed in the past – leading only to squandered investment in useless infrastructure – make two mistakes.
According to IMF critics, bailouts allowed leaders from Brazil to Turkey to avoid painful but necessary reforms, with the perverse effect of making crises inevitable.
Are social
critics
right to worry about the atomized loneliness of big-city life?
Beijing attracts China’s leading political critics, while Jerusalem’s social
critics
argue for an interpretation of religion that holds people, rather than inanimate objects, sacred.
Critics
of trade agreements have marshaled countless anecdotes about the adverse effects of imports on wages and employment in affected communities.
Recent empirical work by three academic economists – David Autor (MIT), David Dorn (University of Zurich), and Gordon Hanson (UC-San Diego) – shows that the
critics
have a point (and then some).
Whereas Wen’s supporters remain adamant that he fundamentally supported a shift toward democracy and a market economy for China, his
critics
lambast him for failing to fulfill his promises of political and economic reform.
The big difference between the Malthusian conservative
critics
of social insurance in the early nineteenth century and the Chicago
critics
of the 1970’s is that the Chicago
critics
had a point: Providing public support to the “worthy” poor, and then removing it when they began to stand on their own feet, poisoned incentives and was unlikely to lead to good outcomes.
So what is the problem that America’s new generation of conservative
critics
of social insurance sees?
Critics
present nuclear disarmament as unrealistic at best, and a risky utopian dream at worst.
Critics
in the United States complain that the over-militarization of foreign policy undercuts its credibility.
Critics
slammed the shot as “disaster porn,” calling it yet another example of how the international media sensationalize African problems.
Within a few hours of the accident,
critics
trained their sights on all the usual suspects: the Minerals Management Service, for giving BP a pass on routine inspections and lapsing into a relationship with the oil industry that United States President Barack Obama denounced as “cozy”;Obama himself, for having failed to enact the reforms at the Interior Department that he had promised while campaigning for election; the oil services firm Transocean, for the faulty blowout preventer; and, of course, BP, for a “lax” and even “reckless” safety culture.
Critics’ second point, that Germany is stingy with its global purchasing, is more complicated.
But, in terms of addressing global macroeconomic imbalances, Germany’s
critics
will be disappointed by such measures.
The challenge facing Sharia's
critics
is to modernize Islamic law, not banish it from public life.
France was among the leading
critics
of Ireland, when, in 2000, the Irish government reduced its budget surplus, which then stood at 4% of GDP, by a mere 0.5%.
Some
critics
even charge that increased corruption exposes the failure of economic reforms, particularly privatization.
Back
Next
Related words
Movie
Their
About
Would
Which
There
Argue
Should
Other
Point
Think
People
Economic
Government
Could
Being
Political
After
Really
Against