Demands
in sentence
1800 examples of Demands in a sentence
Like all other prices, it must sometimes increase, sometimes decrease, according to market
demands.
If this remains the US approach, progress toward building the sort of order that today’s interconnected world
demands
will come about only if other major powers push it – or it will have to wait for Trump’s successor.
Such a cavalier attitude to the
demands
of lesser powers to be heard is no longer possible.
(Of course, paradoxes appear every now and then, such as when globalization is advocated alongside
demands
for stronger censorship.)
The fear inspired by the Fukushima Daiichi disaster will be reflected in soaring costs for nuclear power worldwide, largely owing to
demands
for improved safety and the need to pay more to insure the potential risks.
A choice will ultimately need to be made about how to meet India’s energy
demands.
On the contrary, it
demands
a fundamental rethink of business models that facilitate and even reward hate speech.
One of Cameron’s four major
demands
of the EU is a national derogation from elements of the uniform rulebook which the European Central Bank is seeking to introduce in the eurozone’s banking union to ensure a consistent approach across countries.
Inspired by Yousafzai, they were far from quiescent; on the contrary, they were vocal in their
demands
for the same rights that boys enjoy.
This includes joint anti-terror training and
demands
to reduce US forces in the region, particularly from Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.
The Obama administration relied on the language of human rights in Libya, but it was content to ignore the democratic
demands
of millions of Yemenis.
But the credibility of such
demands
is undermined by the Arabs’ inability to alleviate Palestinian misery and, no less importantly, by their failure to help the Palestinians face the hard choices they will need to make if an orderly Palestinian state is ever to emerge.
Now Germany can take a tough stance on the new Greek government's
demands
for a large-scale debt write-off and an end to austerity, without fearing the kind of financial-market turbulence that in 2012 left the eurozone with little choice but to bail out Greece.
In fact, both of the Greek government's
demands
are based on a misunderstanding.
The relatively low debt-service cost also removes the justification for Syriza's
demands
for an end to austerity.
And José Manuel Barroso called subsidiarity “a fundamental democratic principle,” because “an ever closer union among the citizens of Europe
demands
that decisions are taken as openly as possible and as closely to the people as possible.”
Its reasoning seems to be that the proposed changes fall far short of what the Supreme Court’s case law demands, and that the ESM does not alter the EU’s essential scope or objectives.
Of course, one might argue that Asian thrift and American profligacy merely reflect asymmetric
demands
for credit: Asians are intrinsically more reluctant to borrow.
Even Al Qaeda and the Taliban have limited their
demands
to the creation of statelets (emirates), which they hope will eventually coalesce into a caliphate.
Rich economies are already challenged by this decline, and so are scrambling to meet the insatiable
demands
of public pension and health care systems, which causes their fiscal balances to deteriorate.
But these relative prices will increasingly reflect the changed
demands
of the aging citizenry of industrial nations.
Their manifestos and campaign materials do not convey the sense of urgency that the current situation
demands.
The US justice system
demands
more, and we have imposed procedural safeguards to meet these
demands.
For ordinary citizens, who have neither access to the media nor personal contacts with the authorities, protests are an opportunity to inform officials of their demands, requests, and suggestions.
The group quickly and unconditionally accepted President Mahmoud Abbas’s three demands: to dissolve the Hamas-led administrative committee, to allow the Ramallah-based Palestinian government to resume its role in Gaza, and to allow presidential and parliamentary elections to take place in both Gaza and the West Bank.
Since taking office, Rouhani has responded quickly to the Iranian public’s
demands.
In particular, contextual intelligence requires an understanding of groups’ cultures; the distribution of power resources; followers’ needs and demands; information flows; and timing.
It
demands
that people learn new skills, adapt to new systems, and change their behavior.
The eurozone’s survival
demands
a credible solution to its long-running sovereign-debt crisis, which in turn requires addressing the two macroeconomic imbalances – external and fiscal – which are at the heart of that crisis.
In fact, China has already agreed that it could meet roughly 40% of the 142 trade
demands
presented by the US earlier this year, and could negotiate a further 40%.
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