Ensure
in sentence
3869 examples of Ensure in a sentence
So, rather than hire in a panic at the first sign of recovery, as they did in the past, for fear that they will be unable to do so later and lose sales, firms today would rather
ensure
that the recovery is well established before hiring.
Most importantly, committed organizations and individuals must unite and mobilize to isolate the extremists – and remain united in working to develop the culture of tolerance and respect needed to
ensure
the full enjoyment of our rights.
In these models, the interest rate is the key policy tool, to be dialed up and down to
ensure
good economic performance.
While this may be enough to
ensure
that it doesn’t pass, there are strong protectionist forces in the US government pushing hard for it and similar policies.
Such assurances from central bankers cannot always be trusted, but Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s promises to move more gradually than in the past are credible, because the Fed is genuinely determined to push inflation higher and to
ensure
that it never again falls much below 2%.
One assessment estimates that about $40 billion a year will be needed to halve rates of deforestation and
ensure
sustainable management of forests in developing countries by the target date.
Forests
ensure
water supplies, counter soil erosion, and safeguard an abundance of genetic resources that will become increasingly important in developing the new products, pharmaceuticals, and crop strains needed to support the lives and livelihoods of more than nine billion people by 2050.
For its own self-protection, Saudi Arabia will have to
ensure
that its embargo on Iranian military assistance to the Houthis in Yemen remains in place.
The EU must
ensure
that it is truly a bastion of free trade, even if America moves to act as a stronghold of protectionism.
That would help to
ensure
that three decades of legal reform is more bone and sinew than running water.
But, in addition to the right legal and regulatory framework to
ensure
appropriate links to the national economy – which is also lacking in most of the region – the search for desirable investors requires an effective foreign investment promotion agency.
Against this background, it is vital not only to
ensure
that there are enough quality jobs for all workers, old and young, but also to boost productivity among older workers – an objective that new technologies can help to achieve.
Experienced observers remind us that crises, rather than vision, have tended to drive progress at critical stages of Europe’s historic integration – a multi-decade journey driven by the desire to
ensure
long-term peace and prosperity in what previously had been one of the world’s most violent regions and the site of appalling human suffering.
For them, only a crisis can stop politicians from just kicking various cans farther down the road and, instead, catalyze the policy initiatives – greater fiscal, banking, and political union – that, together with monetary union, would
ensure
that the eurozone rests on a stable and sustainable four-legged platform.
Even as reputable firms
ensure
the quality of all their inputs, this loophole can allow unsafe products to enter the market, as occurred in 2008, when at least 81 Americans died after receiving doses of the blood thinner heparin that contained adulterated Chinese material.
That calls for a legal system that can adjudicate disputes and
ensure
fair, equitable, and timely treatment.
Technical feats like three-dimensional seismic imaging and tube-rotary drilling are no doubt impressive, but they are problematic when unaccompanied by adequate emergency-response plans or the regulatory oversight needed to
ensure
that accidents are prevented and mitigated.
To
ensure
global food security – not to mention other fundamental human rights – for all, we need to recognize our limitations, in terms of both social and biophysical factors, and do whatever it takes to
ensure
that we do not exceed them.
Based on this conviction, the MSF approach demands that governments take steps to empower women in all areas of society, and
ensure
that all sexually active people have access to modern birth control, with women free to have an abortion, if they so choose.
African policymakers must therefore develop systems for prevention, diagnosis, and care that help governments share the disease burden and
ensure
that treatment protocols are consistent across regions.
To
ensure
the future prosperity of the Middle East, its governments and citizens must ask themselves if new technologies are being designed and adapted to meet real social needs, or if they are simply ushering in change for its own sake.
It provides no tools to
ensure
implementation of the policies and measures needed to keep global warming “well below” two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, the threshold that forms the centerpiece of the deal.
But building the infrastructure is just the first step; now we must
ensure
that it is serving consumers’ needs and interests.
As a senior Treasury official recently declared, Mnuchin will be “pushing hard” to
ensure
that the G20 plays “a helpful role in advancing US interests.”
The whole point of the Cold War was to
ensure
that a hot one would be prevented.
With no institutions left to
ensure
a peaceful political transition in these countries, violent groups had an advantage over ordinary citizens, and a crude fight for power ensued.
But Africa and its partners will now have to unite to win the adoption of measures that
ensure
the sustainable exploitation of Africa’s vast environmental potential in the interest of us all.
China’s strategic imperatives in this competition are twofold: to
ensure
that no rival acquires a dangerous “privileged influence” in any of its border regions; and to promote stability so that trade, and the sea lanes through which it passes (hence China’s interest in Sri Lanka and in combating Somali pirates), is protected.
Laws meant to curb hate speech, violence, or “fake news” may be well intentioned, but their implementation has been sloppy, with few mechanisms to
ensure
accountability, transparency, or reversibility.
In order to
ensure
this outcome, the EU must begin preparing a Plan B that accounts for the coming climate-policy paradigm shift.
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