Fears
in sentence
1520 examples of Fears in a sentence
Achieving these benchmarks will require both significant capital investment and a shift in EU member states’ mentalities, so that
fears
like France’s do not continue to impede progress.
Each
fears
the spread of Islamic nationalism and so each seeks to prevent the Islamic fervor in Iran and Afghanistan from lapping across their borders.
But their challenge is made more difficult by nay-sayers who claim that
fears
about declining biodiversity are a tree-huggers' conspiracy to elevate Nature above people.
The Iranian government
fears
that electricity shortages, slow economic growth, and high unemployment will turn the populace against it.
Fueled by racism and
fears
of overcrowding, globalism turned predatory: powerful countries imposed uneven trade pacts on neighbors and partners, or simply overran them.
Instead of catering to European
fears
and prejudices about exchange rates, the Fed chairman should put politics aside and stick to sound economics.
And now that the government has imposed new restrictions on capital flows, the country’s attractiveness to foreign investors will fall further.Capital controls are of course in keeping with the “resistance economy” favored by conservatives, one of whom recently stoked
fears
of capital flight by declaring that $30 billion had left the country in only a few months.
Capital controls are of course in keeping with the “resistance economy” favored by conservatives, one of whom recently stoked
fears
of capital flight by declaring that $30 billion had left the country in only a few months.
Perceptions of resilience have given way to
fears
of vulnerability.
This knee-jerk reaction presumes that China’s current slowdown is but a prelude to more growth disappointments to come – a presumption that reflects widespread and longstanding
fears
of a broad array of disaster scenarios, ranging from social unrest and environmental catastrophes to housing bubbles and shadow-banking blow-ups.
This is revealed in the tensions that have existed between Poland, which
fears
domination by the EU’s steering group, and Germany, which is reluctant to shoulder the financial burden for a union in which it is under-represented.
While Russia and China asserted that signing an agreement would render any kind of sanction legally unjustifiable, the US sought to allay the
fears
of Iran’s neighbors as much as possible.
The announcement highlights the risk of a regulatory race to the bottom, driven not just by Saudi Aramco’s impending listing, but also by financial deregulation in the United States and
fears
about Brexit’s consequences for the City of London.
Media accounts were vague, with the respectable story pointing to the “rekindling of inflation fears,” which, in fact, was not news.
At home, though, Merkel
fears
this debate like no other – a debate that the financial markets and the crisis in many European countries will ensure cannot be avoided.
For starters, he must work with the US to address commercial and economic issues, including American concerns over India’s weak intellectual-property protections and
fears
within India’s information-technology industry regarding proposed US immigration reform.
Proposals to increase housing density are frequently met by opposition from current residents, whose
fears
range from adverse impact on services to downward pressure on existing home values (or upward pressure and gentrification).
A de facto policy of inflating away the debt might stoke such
fears
further.
If migrants are viewed as a burden or, worse, a security threat, reactionary political forces will continue to gain ground, cutting off opportunities for newcomers and turning such
fears
into a self-fulfilling prophesy.
Was the dream of a unified Europe – inspired by
fears
of another European war, and sustained by the idealistic hope that nation-states were obsolete and would give way to good Europeans – a utopian dead end?
Such
fears
have also been strengthened by schizophrenic behavior, particularly French President Jacques Chirac's chastising candidate countries for voicing support for the US regarding Iraq.
I have little sympathy for the extremists on either side of this issue: those who think that global warming is a hoax, and those who use
fears
of an impending Armageddon to push for heavy-handed government regulation of the economy.
The terrorists’ intention is to sow mistrust and stoke fears; their aim is to weaken the democratic rule of law and to shatter citizens’ confidence in public institutions.
The most recent set of calls for coordination arise from
fears
– articulated, for example, by Raghuram Rajan, Governor of the Reserve Bank of India – that the Fed will not adequately take into account the adverse impact on emerging-market economies when it raises interest rates.
Determining the validity of such
fears
requires understanding what is driving China’s economic slowdown.
Until this choice is made, no amount of additional capital will assuage the private sectors’
fears.
The Myth of a Fossil Fuel Phase-OutBRUSSELS – How the world uses energy is a hot topic for a warming planet, and
fears
of pollution and resource strain have produced a virtual arms race of energy-efficiency strategies.
The International Monetary Fund, for example, has just warned Ukraine that its $40 billion financial bailout could be cut off, owing to
fears
that corrupt officials will steal or squander the funds.
Romania
fears
the fallout from Kosovo’s unilaterally gaining independence on neighboring Moldova.
It
fears
that Russia will encourage separatist tendencies in Crimea, where the ethnic Russian population forms a majority.
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