Failed
in sentence
4093 examples of Failed in a sentence
The standard models
failed
to predict the crisis, but bad ideas die a slow death.
So, while bringing down short-term T-bill rates to near zero has failed, the hope is that bringing down longer-term interest rates will spur the economy.
Regrettably, it is far from clear that it has changed its thinking and models, which
failed
to maintain the economy on an even keel before – and are certain to fail again.
Regular presidential elections in Mexico
failed
to disguise the fact that the same party ruled the country for over seven decades until earlier this year.
So, if the purpose of austerity was to reduce debt levels, its critics are right: fiscal belt-tightening has
failed.
Under Putin, Russia’s post-imperial transformation has failed, and Russia remains pre-occupied with its place in the world and torn between its historical European and Slavophile identities.
At that point, the board would be expected to step up and censure, if not fire, the
failed
CEO.
That means that there is a more fundamental problem at play: America’s system of checks and balances has so far
failed
to work as effectively as the US – and the world – needs it to.
Many developing-country governments
failed
to learn the lesson of earlier crises, which should have prompted regulations and taxes restricting and discouraging foreign-currency exposures.
That disguised coup
failed
– barely – and there is no guarantee that the result will be similar this time around in Mexico.
But Germany is skeptical of what it sees as a “transfer union,” in which its taxpayers would hand over cash to profligate countries that have
failed
to remodel their economies along German lines.
But the fundamental problem is that, until now, at every historical juncture, the Palestinians refused to accept a compromise and consequently
failed
in nation-building.
The Cultural Contradictions of MulticulturalismSTOCKHOLM – State-sponsored multiculturalism has
failed.
It is not just official multiculturalism that has
failed
in Europe, however; so has the multiculturalism endorsed by large parts of European civil society.
For the West, using the opportunity to influence Hamas’s future course requires modifying the
failed
policy of all-encompassing rejection.
It
failed
because making quick, drastic cuts in carbon emissions is extremely expensive.
So, too, is continuing to embrace a response to global warming that has
failed
for nearly two decades.
Equally problematic, the world has largely
failed
to learn from globalization’s most obvious and far-reaching consequence yet: the 2008 financial crisis.
The problem was that central banks, finance ministries, and multilateral organizations like the International Monetary Fund – the pillars of the global economy’s institutional framework –
failed
to grasp globalization’s emerging characteristics and effects, owing partly to the difficulty of discerning structural shifts in the huge mass of data now available.
In this context, it is not surprising that ordinary citizens feel uncertain about the future and frustrated with their governments, which have so far
failed
to protect them from globalization’s fallout.
Moreover, for ten years, stewardship from Brussels has
failed
to bring about reform of national policies, and it is not clear that additional or more automatic sanctions would elicit a greater sense of “ownership” of the rules.
But, while Trump is impulsive and occasionally vindictive – a potentially fatal mix in an already fragile world – his election should be a spur to challenge
failed
ideas and to move beyond excessive reliance on the United States’ inevitably imperfect global leadership.
Yet, after dozens of meetings, public and private, the two sides
failed
to reach an agreement.
Mindful of a long history of
failed
attempts at economic “shock therapy,” Macri decided to fix the fiscal mess he inherited only gradually.
During the last five years, dozens of solar manufacturing companies have failed, only to be replaced by stronger, more innovative, and more efficient players.
Shards of EuropePRINCETON – As European leaders struggle after another
failed
summit, they should think hard about what their continent – and the world – might look like if they continue to produce unsatisfactory solutions to Europe’s financial and economic problems.
Unfortunately, none of this seems likely if left exclusively in the hands of Venezuelans, who have
failed
repeatedly over the past 15 years to find solutions to their dilemmas.
This extremism is, slowly but surely, producing its own reaction, as we see from Islamaphobic parties’ electoral gains in Europe, and statements by European leaders that multiculturalism has
failed.
And, contrary to the regime’s expectations, the Winter Olympics in Sochi also
failed
to revive Putin’s popularity.
Additionally, most countries that have funded development and infrastructure through borrowing have
failed
to generate sufficient additional tax revenues to repay that debt.
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