Expertise
in sentence
639 examples of Expertise in a sentence
Some of us argued that the government should use professionally designed auctions – an area where economists have
expertise
akin to engineers – instead of selling the asset for a pre-determined price.
This “Petty problem” is likely to become worse, as the world’s complexity – and, thus, its reliance on
expertise
– increases.
To be successful, both sides must appreciate the
expertise
– and the needs – of the other.
Greater efforts are needed to seize international opportunities for human-capital development, to repatriate the resulting knowledge and expertise, and to spread what is learned to more people at home.
But health is only a small part of the Bank’s “portfolio,” and it typically works in this area with partners who bring to the table
expertise
in medicine.
Since
expertise
on development by and large lies within the emerging and developing countries – after all, they live development – it seems natural that the World Bank’s head would come from one of those countries.
The next Fed chairman should be someone with an open mind, a willingness to engage the staff, and a desire to cultivate
expertise
throughout the Federal Reserve System.
Their professional
expertise
is validated by the quality of their advanced degrees, rather than by their achievements in practical policymaking.
This would make the IMF staff more cognizant of the value of local knowledge relative to theoretical
expertise.
NATO has created a Comprehensive Crisis and Operations Management Center that brings together civilian and military
expertise
on crisis identification, planning, operations, reconstruction, and stabilization capabilities in ways that are explicitly designed to connect NATO headquarters in Europe to “the networked world.”
Destination countries could also establish urban work and training centers for incoming migrants, many of whom will lack the skills required to land city jobs; and they should recognize the qualifications of those who do have expertise, and help them to find work.
Guns require just a little training to operate, whereas an electrical utility requires a large team of people with varied
expertise
to run the generators, install and service the transmission lines and sub-stations, limit theft, and compel customers to pay their bills on time.
Pakistan desperately needs the EU’s vaunted
expertise
in police training.
In the US, such schemes contribute to widespread dissemination of expertise, whereas European laboratories still use them as waiting lines without putting enough emphasis on multinational and multidisciplinary trajectories.
Creating an international pool of
expertise
could become an important asset for European universities, while enabling European industries to create new jobs.
International technical and financial cooperation will ensure that TB
expertise
is maintained even in countries facing a decline in the number of cases.
I can answer that question only in my own area expertise, economics.
But achieving the targets will require sustained focus, drawing on the resources and
expertise
of governments, international non-profit organizations, and, crucially, the private sector.
This includes not only the mobilization of private investment, but also the deployment of the vast amounts of technical, operational, and locally tailored
expertise
that private companies have gained in the course of doing business around the world.
In her recent talk, Rivlin expressed confidence that, despite today’s populist attacks on expertise, high-quality policy analysis will continue to flourish in the twenty-first-century public sphere.
Medical
expertise
is in some ways being replaced by computer-based diagnostic systems (expert systems), and much of the work that engineers once did has been replaced by computer-assisted design (CAD) systems.
In order to succeed, we must capitalize on the
expertise
of individuals and groups that have been quietly, diligently, and independently studying such diseases.
At the same time, more scientific
expertise
must be devoted to analyzing the shared data and providing new ideas about prevention and treatment.
At a time when science and
expertise
are increasingly being dismissed as elitist conceits, governments that know better should not be helping fossil-fuel companies profit from the mounting climate crisis.
Ideally, Iran would like to become a hub — and perhaps the center — of Central Asia, providing communications, infrastructure,
expertise
and a major international airport and other transportation links.
Clearly, however, communication via tweets and web-based commentary has strengthened the idea that
expertise
is redundant.
That means building more comprehensive and integrated business models, informed by experienced talent with
expertise
in a broader array of areas, in order to move beyond these companies’ laser focus on innovation.
On the contrary, it is starving the ability of key units such as the WHO to carry out their job, and to attract and keep the
expertise
that they need.
Moreover, it is extremely difficult to correct misperceptions once they ossify – particularly if the topic in question is outside a pundit’s range of
expertise.
And private investors can provide risk capital, innovation, and management expertise, both as contractors on publicly funded projects and as partners in revenue-generating projects.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Which
Would
Technical
People
Resources
Countries
Knowledge
International
Should
Could
Public
World
Scientific
Other
There
Institutions
Financial
Experience
Global