Desirable
in sentence
493 examples of Desirable in a sentence
Abandoning mandatory retirement and opening employment opportunities to people who are able to work at older ages would reduce the burden of an increasing number of pensioners and enable a
desirable
redistribution of work across generations.
The Chinese view these goals as both
desirable
and necessary.
This means that it has to consider not just the
desirable
rate of inflation (the target is a 2% annual rate), but also the state of the labor market – and its judgment has global implications.
Association Agreements, although desirable, may not be adequate, as the EU's Balkan experiences indicate.
It would be
desirable
to set up joint working groups with the countries concerned to establish, monitor, and adjust individual action plans.
British EMU membership remains very
desirable.
What the world needs now are leaders who are willing to bridge the gap between daunting short-term demands and
desirable
long-term outcomes.
Finally, there is the assumption running through the report that automation is not just desirable, but irreversible.
But even
desirable
changes come with transition costs, and those costs will grow as the new administration dangerously undermines core market-economy principles.
A stable Euro makes stronger cooperation possible and desirable: not only to prevent global financial instability but to avoid the risk of conflicting currency blocs arising.
The first – and more
desirable
– is for the ECB to assess realistically Greece’s lack of solvency and so stop providing ELA funds to its banking system.
This second option would be less
desirable
than the first.
Given the continent’s history of war and ideological division, and today’s challenges posed by globalization, a peaceful, prosperous, and united Europe that wields influence abroad is surely a
desirable
goal.
If there is no downturn during the next several years, it would still be
desirable
to start some of those projects.
Given how many countries have an interest in maintaining a cooperative game, such policy actions are not just desirable; they may be feasible.
A functioning market, one with
desirable
working properties, is not a gift of nature or something that emerges inevitably when the state leaves room for private economic activity.
Desirable
government policy consists of a carrots and stick: encouraging investment and entrepreneurship in the modern sector ex ante, but, equally important, rationalizing production and driving out poor performers ex post.
Today’s accepted wisdom is that markets are optimally balanced whatever their state, meaning that no government intervention or regulation would be efficient or
desirable.
But there is no vacuum; instead, there is a new, unprecedented and
desirable
system in place.
Indeed, a Taylor rule is a guide for
desirable
policy only if one thinks that the policies followed in that period were desirable, or, more to the point, that similar policies will be
desirable
in the future.
In Mill’s view, an open society ruled mainly by educated elites is the most
desirable
form of government.
Two questions should determine whether monetary finance is a
desirable
policy option.
If insufficient nominal demand is a problem – with increased inflation
desirable
and faster real growth possible – monetary finance should an option.
But it may not be a
desirable
option if – and this is the second question – the political risks of monetary finance are just too great.
The focus is no longer on what is environmentally
desirable
or on the measures needed to keep climate change in check; rather, it is on what is politically feasible – the possibilities and constraints of the negotiating process, especially with a view to securing broad participation.
The only
desirable
scenario, therefore, is a Chinese economy that transmits its stimulus to the rest of the world mainly through rising imports generated by rapid economic growth (i.e., the income effect on import demand), rather than by exchange-rate appreciation (the substitution effect).
Equally important, a
desirable
global scenario is possibly one in which most developing countries run current-account deficits.
First, why should a country concentrate on accumulating trophies at the expense of other
desirable
goods?
No other action holds as much potential to make Chinese leadership within Asia seem both credible, and desirable, especially if the alternative is a reckless, poorly planned US-led war.
They are compensated, for example, should the government adopt a regulation that hurts their bottom line, no matter how
desirable
the regulation or how great the harm caused by the corporation in its absence.
Back
Related words
Would
Which
Their
Should
Policy
Growth
Economic
Highly
Countries
Other
World
While
There
Social
Government
Could
Outcome
Necessary
Feasible
Policies