Decision
in sentence
3429 examples of Decision in a sentence
The first
decision
was to reduce taxes on overtime work, a measure clearly aimed at increasing the number of hours worked.
Customers have always voted with their feet; they can now explain their
decision
to anyone who is interested.
The impact of ratings depends on whether the typical consumer actually reads online reviews before making a
decision.
This
decision
not only reflected Tusk’s successful leadership in Poland, where he ensured political stability and oversaw impressive economic progress; it was also a clear signal that EU leaders fully acknowledge Poland’s political and economic importance.
Indeed, during the ongoing crisis, Poland has taken a firm stand: no one has the right to deny a European country its sovereign
decision
about its relationship with Europe.
The most recent
decision
of the regional tribunal, in mid-December, overturned a 1979 Brazilian amnesty law protecting military officials from prosecution for abuses committed during the country’s 21-year military dictatorship.
While the
decision
would have a significant political downside – that is, immediately diluting Scotland’s newly acquired sovereignty – its economic implications are mixed.
Ukraine’s Prisoner’s DilemmaWASHINGTON – The European Union’s most important
decision
this fall will be whether to sign an Association Agreement with Ukraine at the EU summit in Vilnius on November 28-29.
The European Council of Ministers will make its final
decision
on November 18.
Likewise, Brazil’s
decision
to send troops into Haiti in 2004 as part of a UN Stabilization Force burnished the country’s image as a responsible regional power.
This may have been a strategic consideration, or simply a
decision
made in ignorance.
The
decision
about whether to establish such a body is an important feature of the FFD3 agenda.
The court declared the PiS’s judicial rule changes unconstitutional, but the PiS-led government refused to publish the court’s decision, thereby blocking it from taking effect.
This time, Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann is warning that the erosion of central-bank independence in some countries – reflected in the Bank of Japan’s recent
decision
to buy an unlimited number of government bonds to meet its new inflation target of 2% – will trigger competitive exchange-rate devaluations.
Indeed, Weidmann views the BoJ’s
decision
as an alarming sign of central banks’ growing tendency to bow to political pressure.
These concerns remain acute, even in the aftermath of the
decision
by the Czech Constitutional Court on November 26 that the Lisbon Treaty is compatible with the Czech constitution and can be ratified in the normal way by the Czech Parliament.
In the wake of the Brexit decision, Cameron’s hapless successor, Theresa May, has been caught between the demands of Brexiteers like her erstwhile foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, for “control of our borders” and the fears of the Remainers concerning the economic and political consequences of leaving.
The
decision
to prioritize reforms over obstinate rule-following proved to be a good one.
To Serbia’s credit, the Ministry made its policy
decision
knowing that the change would require belt-tightening elsewhere in its budget, but it took the action because it concluded that protecting human rights was more important than saving a few dinars.
Hopefully, Serbia’s
decision
will inspire the other states of Central and Eastern Europe, including states that have won membership in the European Union, to follow its lead.
Morsi’s
decision
on November 22 to grant himself absolute authority for the spurious purpose of defending the revolution is not new for Egypt.
Whatever his decision, Taiwan’s first DPP president will go down in history as a pathetic failure, because he used his office to divide the island’s citizens, as if his domestic political opponents were Taiwan’s mortal enemies.
For South Koreans, whether to care for hungry North Koreans, who are kith and kin, will be a much tougher
decision
than for others who see only a distant security problem.
If so, and if denying food aid would result in a famine that the North Korean regime could not withstand, what could such a
decision
mean for eventual relations among Korean peoples living in the northern and southern parts of a unified country?
The
decision
to withdraw from the JCPOA, despite Iranian compliance with all of its provisions, is likely to make addressing Iran’s nuclear program more difficult, not least because it will strengthen the position of the country’s hardliners.
If voters in France’s upcoming presidential election prove closer to the Dutch than to Americans and Britons in their susceptibility to xenophobia and protectionism, their
decision
will have global implications for politics, economics, and the ideology of global capitalism.
It is no surprise that Moscovici is beginning to push for a “collective European decision” to relax the fiscal treaty’s terms, given that French compliance would require massive new spending cuts.
But it is equally obvious that, as the European Parliament’s Resolution of February 20 puts it, “the Treaty of Lisbon is a substantial improvement on the existing Treaties, which will bring more democratic accountability to the Union and enhance its
decision
making.”
Just a few weeks before Trump’s
decision
to withdraw from the Paris accord, the global High-Level Commission on Carbon Prices, which I co-chaired with Nicholas Stern, highlighted the potential of a green transition.
Various members of the Fed’s policy-setting Federal Open Markets Committee (FOMC) have called the
decision
to keep the base rate unchanged “data-dependent.”
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