Difficulties
in sentence
832 examples of Difficulties in a sentence
NEW HAVEN – If one were seeking a perfect example of why it’s so hard to make financial markets work well, one would not have to look further than the
difficulties
and controversies surrounding crowdfunding in the United States.
The worst
difficulties
stem from China’s dependence on international markets, especially the United States.
One of the
difficulties
of making the case for enlargement is that to sell it in Germany or Austria requires the assurance of closed, watertight eastern borders, while to sell it in Poland, Hungary or the Czech Republic needs the promise of soft, open ones.
Several consequences follow from this divergence:
difficulties
in policy coordination, given no agreement on the diagnosis; a very probable return to large US external deficits while Europe remains in balance; and a weaker dollar, which will become evident if the crisis in the eurozone subsides.
At times, there has been talk of a Sixth Republic, which would address limited but real concerns and
difficulties.
What are the legal
difficulties?
That will present certain
difficulties
for Brazil’s bid to host the UN Climate Change Conference (COP25) next year.
None is without
difficulties
and risks, but only engagement is compatible with liberal democracy.
Considering these difficulties, some inside the Party admit that "there is only one way forward: let someone be in charge, no matter how she or he is chosen, even through an election, provided effective decision-making is restored."
Unlike the US, the EU’s
difficulties
stem not from a perceived lack of legitimacy or crude attempts at promoting democracy, but from a real lack of unity and, therefore, influence.
Imperfect information and
difficulties
in monitoring firms pose significant obstacles to idealized risk-sharing instruments.
We must also attract foreign investment, despite the
difficulties
facing Europe, the US, and Japan.
So, as the Obama administration struggles to implement its smart-power strategy in the current revolutionary conditions of the Middle East, it is worth noting that the US is not alone in confronting the
difficulties
of combining hard and soft power successfully.
The explanation for this divided world is that countries like Greece, Spain, and the US, which experienced a long boom financed by huge capital imports, now face growing
difficulties
in finding foreign finance.
The
difficulties
are multiplied when attempted in times of economic crisis.
It is the Geneva Conventions and the First Additional Protocol that create the greatest
difficulties
for the Bush administration.
Such plans, however, are by no means foolproof – not least owing to the
difficulties
of finding concealed nuclear assets and safeguarding reactors.
In fact, Bulgarian, Croatian, and Romanian households have already loaded up on excessive debt in foreign currencies – primarily euros – in anticipation of joining the monetary union, and this has created substantial financial
difficulties.
It is mostly Jewish, though a young Arab professional class is now coming out of the universities and making its way – with
difficulties
– into the heartland of civil society.
Sanctions, to be credible, must come into play long before a country falls into economic difficulties; therefore, they should not be purely financial in character, but should include other measures as well.
I have encountered many personal and professional
difficulties.
In all likelihood, therefore, Europe will not be playing the Italian card; instead, it will face substantial
difficulties
in freeing itself from its current stagnation.
Pessimists stress the feared reversal of private capital flows, owing to the US Federal Reserve’s tapering of its purchases of long-term assets, as well as the
difficulties
of so-called second- and third-generation structural reforms and the limits to “catch up” growth outside of manufacturing.
That does not mean more media coverage of the deformities associated with microcephaly or even of the
difficulties
faced by their mothers.
Just consider what must be overcome: economic divergence and deepening recessions; irreversible balkanization of the banking system and financial markets; unsustainable debt burdens for public and private agents; daunting growth and balance-sheet costs in countries that pursue internal devaluation and deflation to restore competitiveness; asymmetrical adjustment, with moral-hazard risks in the core and insufficient financing in the periphery fueling incompatible political dynamics; fickle and impatient markets and investors; austerity fatigue in the periphery and bailout fatigue in the core; the absence of conditions for an optimal currency area; and serious
difficulties
in achieving full fiscal, banking, economic, and political union.
The Eastern Partnership is not an answer to all the problems and
difficulties
that the six partners are facing.
Just as the Great Depression arose in part from the
difficulties
in moving from a rural, agrarian economy to an urban, manufacturing one, so today’s problems arise partly from the need to move from manufacturing to services.
France’s education and health-care systems, despite difficulties, are still among the best in the world.
But when today’s populists start blaming “the elites,” whoever they may be, and unpopular ethnic or religious minorities, for these difficulties, they sound uncomfortably close to the enemies of liberal democracy in the 1930s.
As a result, the regime may be trying to divert people’s attention from internal
difficulties
and push them to unite behind the emerging new leader.
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