Emergency
in sentence
1152 examples of Emergency in a sentence
Employers with a large number of full-time employees could encourage their existing insurance companies to create the
emergency
policies.
They might even choose to self-insure the
emergency
risk for their employees.
Even if the starting point is a high debt-to-GDP ratio, it can be a long time before growing debt triggers an
emergency.
The solution to any crisis,
emergency
or conflict, must always be political and our ESDP actions are always firmly anchored in political strategies, formed by consensus.
Moreover, a lot of
emergency
government spending on current items is really best seen as national savings and investment.
On that day, the ECB, pressured by Germany, rescinded an important part of its exemption, thereby cutting off Greek banks’ direct access to the ECB and diverting them to pricier financing from Greece’s central bank (so-called
emergency
liquidity assistance).
Though the Trump administration has yet to propose an adequate response to its crisis – declaring a national
emergency
and failing to put any new spending behind the order is clearly insufficient – at least it recognizes that using the police to kill dealers and users is not a solution.
UNEP also offered clear and detailed recommendations, including
emergency
measures to ensure safe drinking water; cleanup activities targeting the mangroves and soils; public-health studies to identify and counteract the consequences of pollution; and a new regulatory framework.
But today, the Ciorbea cabinet claims that, due to the economic rot left behind by the Iliescu government, Romania confronts an almost permanent
emergency.
Far too many people end up in the
emergency
room and the hospital because they lacked the advice and help to keep their conditions under control without institutional care, or even to prevent their disorders entirely.
Smart healthcare is therefore holistic, helping people not only as patients arriving in the
emergency
room, but also as individuals and family members in their own homes and communities.
More immediately, they are also challenging the government’s ban on street demonstrations – a vestige of the state of
emergency
that lasted from 1992 until 2011.
To meet that risk, nuclear plants maintain large
emergency
diesel generators, which can operate for days – until their fuel runs out.
The reactor meltdowns at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi power station in 2011 demonstrated what happens when primary and
emergency
operating power are cut.
Wartime conditions would prevent
emergency
crews from getting to an affected plant to contain radiological releases should reactor containments fail.
Plant operators should stockpile diesel fuel to keep
emergency
generators operating.
They became major contributors to the Fund’s
emergency
loan pool (the New Arrangements to Borrow) immediately after the crisis and now provide 15.5% of the NAB’s resources.
Instead, regions and countries are quietly finding their own ways to manage finance, create pooled
emergency
funds, and strengthen development finance – an outcome that heralds a more fragmented and decentralized set of regulatory regimes and a modest de-globalization of finance and aid.
This $120 billion regional reserve pool was launched in 2010 to provide short-term liquidity to members in an
emergency.
In its infancy, it might not be able to provide adequate
emergency
support in a timely and flexible manner.
Judging by governments’ reactions to the crisis, one could be forgiven for thinking that market regulators and competition authorities should take the lead when an economy is stable, and that industrial policies should be implemented in times of
emergency.
Europe should have used its regulatory power and managed the conflict between systemic and competitive risk that all this
emergency
public funding was generating, but the competition watchdog’s contradictory request that companies receiving funding should reduce credit to their clients made this well nigh impossible.
In the aftermath of World War II, when the Austrian republic was struggling to establish itself as a democracy, it was reasonable, as a temporary
emergency
measure, for Austrian democrats to suppress Nazi ideas and propaganda.
Emergency
relief to refugees must be accompanied with far greater support for the communities that host them.
Even the International Monetary Fund – which, along with other European lenders, has provided Greece with
emergency
financing – recently joined that call.
Aided by the European Central Bank – which loosened its collateral policy for refinancing credits and increased its tolerance for
emergency
liquidity assistance and credits under the Agreement on Net Financial Assets – they drew hundreds of billions of euros out of the monetary system through so-called Target overdrafts.
The government responded by declaring a state of
emergency
in several of Nigeria’s northern states.
In fact, it is only the latest in a long line of nuclear accidents involving meltdowns, explosions, fires, and loss of coolant – accidents that have occurred during both normal operation and
emergency
conditions, such as droughts and earthquakes.
Thus, the state’s coffers (and hence spending) overflow during booms, but then collapse, forcing
emergency
retrenchment, during busts.
While all must first deal with the current emergency, sensible local fiscal, tax, and political reforms are vital to restore a balance of centralized and decentralized government.
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