Eroded
in sentence
228 examples of Eroded in a sentence
Revelations of pervasive online surveillance have already
eroded
trust in the Internet and its suitability for communicating, accessing information, and doing business.
But five decades of economic mismanagement – first by the Socialist Party for 40 years, and then by Wade’s liberals for the last decade –
eroded
this heritage.
Although rising labor and energy costs have
eroded
the industry’s competitiveness, the government continues to demand more.
Moreover, if Sarkozy has eroded, perhaps fatally, the “sacred” symbolic nature of the presidency, his governance has failed to provide any compensating reassurance.
The breakdown of the global economy in the first half of the 20 th century in the wake of the First World War further
eroded
India's incipient integration into the world economy during the British Raj.
Even the regulation-reinforced, fortress-like walls that have traditionally surrounded finance and medicine are being
eroded.
With technology enabling unprecedented mobility and connectivity, the jurisdictional power of nation-states is being eroded, meaning that a truly effective response – one that unleashes the full benefits of disruptive technologies – is impossible without multilateral cooperation and coordination.
In the inflationary times of yore, you might have also accompanied your response with the (reasonable) complaint that increases in the cost of living
eroded
your increased money income.
In this interpretation, wages were
eroded
and jobs were lost because of the inflow of poorly qualified and cheap central Europeans.
What makes the debate so passionate in 2005 is a new fear that did not exist in the 1980’s: that the new members have a different social model, in which workers’ rights and the welfare state will be
eroded.
Either way, Trump has
eroded
the credibility of institutions such as the press, the intelligence agencies, and the US Department of Justice, making everything relative and playing to his extremely loyal base.
Much of this failure is the result of the Bush administration’s policies, which effectively
eroded
the capacities of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the government agency primarily responsible for dealing with disasters.
Key institutions, including the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court, and the Senate of the Republic, are being
eroded.
Moreover, many technological innovations have not translated into higher productivity growth, the pace of structural reforms remains slow, and protracted cyclical stagnation has
eroded
the skills base and that of physical capital.
The following year, tests revealed that the brain had been
eroded
by a myriad of small vacuoles, producing the sponge-like appearance that inspired the disease’s scientific name: bovine spongiform encephalopathy.
Even if one-fifth of these benefits were
eroded
by the costs of redistribution, this would still amount to $9 trillion in benefits to humanity.
Yet billions of the world’s poorest people live on degraded landscapes, deforested and
eroded
soils, and over-fished coastlines where conservation is vital to lifting them out of poverty.
The current crisis may have seriously
eroded
the wealth of many of the very rich, destroying their assets in an unprecedented way.
The two institutions that seemed most dynamic and effective in 2008-2009 were the International Monetary Fund and the G-20; the credibility of both has been steadily
eroded
over the long course of the crisis.
Unsurprisingly, high payroll taxes strained the capacity of working people and mounting non-wage labor costs
eroded
companies' international competitiveness.
Of course, the IMF’s member states might be willing to accept some burden sharing if a sufficient buffer provided by the eurozone were eroded, but that cannot be taken for granted.
Victims of online harassment often respond with self-censorship, and many, with their sense of security and even self-worth eroded, remove themselves from social media altogether.
Budget deficits offered what appeared to be a free lunch, as the resulting inflation
eroded
the real value of public debt, while the government had privileged access to private savings at near-zero real interest rates.
Unemployment harms workers, while the lower interest rates needed to generate more jobs may lead to higher inflation, which especially harms those with nominal assets whose value is
eroded.
A widespread perception in advanced countries is that the rents from technological innovation are being
eroded
precipitously.
Even as trust in government institutions has eroded, a culture of dependency has taken hold.
Driven by structural changes, as well as lagging business and policy responses, the middle has been
eroded
– or is at risk – almost everywhere you look.
In the last decade, the position of the UN as a symbol of the ideals of a peaceful world community has been steadily
eroded.
While controversial terms in the deal have
eroded
Santos’s popularity, so, too, has the economy’s performance.
And the qualifications that Reagan did have on Inauguration Day
eroded
over time, after he was wounded in a failed assassination attempt 69 days into his presidency, and, later, when he began to suffer from Alzheimer’s disease.
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