Expectations
in sentence
2213 examples of Expectations in a sentence
The unanswered question is why the public should have the wrong
expectations.
But the effects of so-called quantitative easing also depend on
expectations.
But Keynesians have to face the uncomfortable truth that the success of stabilization policies may depend on the business community having Keynesian
expectations.
But this approach establishes a self-limiting pattern, because balance sheets are damaged, demand falters, and
expectations
have to be adjusted downward.
Obama’s proposed budget recognizes that all objectives and
expectations
cannot be met, and that growth is partly a distributional issue now and an intergenerational issue (and potentially one of inclusiveness and social stability) in the longer term.
As life has gotten easier, with people’s material
expectations
largely met, voters have increasingly favored neo-autocrats who promise to “protect” the people from this or that threat.
The G-20 summit has thus created enormous
expectations
that internationalism may once again overcome a plethora of economic problems.
Unfortunately, the magnitude of the
expectations
alone suggests that disappointment is almost certain.
This served to prevent any mobilization of the 48% of the voters who had voted “Remain” and who, contrary to the
expectations
of most professional politicians, remain strongly opposed to Brexit.
If they do not raise interest rates while the major problem is inflation, they might cause spikes in prices, rising inflationary expectations, and a stubborn wage-price spiral like that of the 1970’s that can be unwound only with a later, deeper depression.
Mexico’s mood is palpable: high
expectations
that the country will escape its past demons - instability, corruption, and massive social divisions - to become a dynamic society built upon strong, distinctive cultures, social inclusion, and a growing role in the world.
Bush administration officials argue that the new plan is “not an open-ended commitment: we are putting real, specific requirements and
expectations
on the Iraqi government.”
Ahmedinejad’s election two years ago came with great expectations, with the new president pledging to “bring oil prices to the dining table of all households in Iran,” and to crack down on corruption.
Recently, Vogel has described Japan’s political system as “an absolute mess,” with prime ministers replaced almost every year and the youngest generation’s
expectations
sapped by years of deflation.
On the contrary, market confidence remains high, boosting
expectations
of increased investment and consumption.
And post-apartheid South Africa, for all its progress, has not fulfilled the
expectations
placed on it, and remains unlikely to become the continent’s gendarme.
In the late 1980s, falling GDP growth (the annual per capita rate reached a low of 2% in 1989) and a rising volume of non-performing loans (NPLs) fueled
expectations
of an economic implosion.
It has to do with many middle-class women’s emotionally complex
expectations
and projections about money.
A major peacekeeping operation in Darfur would likely produce a similar situation: protracted uncertainties regarding the region’s future political status, impeded socioeconomic development, persistently diverging
expectations
among the conflicting parties, unresolved tensions resulting from non-fulfillment of these expectations, and the likelihood of renewed violence should the foreign intervention force withdraw.
Indeed, the empowerment of Iraq’s long-suppressed Shia has raised
expectations
among Saudi Arabia’s Shia that they, too, can gain first-class status.
These are outcomes that fall well short of policymakers’ expectations, be it in America or in Europe.
My research argues that they are usually structural, the result of powerful shifts in
expectations
about future productivity and profitability.
In recent research I conducted with Gylfi Zoega, we hypothesised that such shifts in expectations, and thus in future economic expansion, can be detected in advance from tell-tale shifts in the stock markets.
Share prices may serve as a kind of proxy for the
expectations
and attitudes of businessmen.
In the run-up to this year’s G20 summit in Hamburg, I started to worry that Germany would fall short of these
expectations.
Despite a few scandals and assorted other problems, the Czechs succeeded beyond even the most optimistic
expectations.
After successful experiments in smaller economies, New Zealand in 1990 and then Canada in 1991, and later in Sweden and the United Kingdom, the conviction developed that the new approach represented a superior way of dealing with the problem of inflationary
expectations.
Four Lessons from Egypt’s World Cup ExperienceLAGUNA BEACH – Egypt’s national soccer team rode to Russia for their first World Cup finals in 28 years on a wave of lofty
expectations
and potent fan enthusiasm.
The first lesson is to manage
expectations.
Add to that the fact that Egypt had not qualified for a World Cup final since 1990, and
expectations
ended up far exceeding what the team could realistically achieve in the tournament.
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