Fueled
in sentence
825 examples of Fueled in a sentence
This trend is being driven largely by the same forces that have
fueled
Asia’s economic growth in recent decades: unbridled globalization and technological progress.
But it does control territory, boasts some 20,000 fighters, and,
fueled
by religious ideology, has an agenda.
Similarly, the first Bretton Woods system was sustained with European capital, and Bretton Woods 2 was
fueled
by Asian capital, with the US providing the deficits in both cases.
The country’s moribund economy has
fueled
public disillusionment.
But why would this be different from the pre-2008 capital inflows that
fueled
debt-financed growth?
Affirmative Action for EuropeThe violence in France,
fueled
by staggering unemployment and ruthless policing, reflects the utter failure of the French model of social integration.
The vote to leave the European Union was
fueled
by deep-seated public anger about the huge structural inequalities between the UK’s north and the south – inequalities that, as UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond acknowledged this week, are the worst in Europe.
The nationalism sweeping Europe, indeed, has been partly
fueled
by Russian funding of far-right political parties, the rise of which has prevented Europe from crafting a collective response to the refugee crisis.
Unfortunately, failure to implement policies based on genuine respect for this perspective plunged Sudan into its second costly North-South war,
fueled
the violent conflicts in Western and Eastern Sudan, and created the possibility of the South’s secession.
These realities were masked by the craziness that characterized America’s pre-2008 “Golden Age” of leverage, credit, and debt entitlement, which
fueled
a gigantic but unsustainable boom in construction, housing, leisure, and retail.
Petrodollars flooding into the region financed huge public-spending increases and real-estate booms, and
fueled
an economic bonanza that propped up the continent’s military dictatorships.
Once again, high commodity prices and cheap, abundant capital had
fueled
a decade-long economic boom.
The Chinese Economy’s Great WallWASHINGTON, DC – The recent decline in China’s currency, the renminbi, which has
fueled
turmoil in Chinese stock markets and drove the government to suspend trading twice last week, highlights a major challenge facing the country: how to balance its domestic and international economic obligations.
Worse, beyond the removal of individual autocratic leaders, few of the problems that
fueled
the uprisings have been addressed.
A December Turkish-Russian ceasefire plan, and the Astana negotiation process that kicked off last month in the Kazakh capital,
fueled
more infighting between Arab-led opposition forces and JFS, especially in the overpopulated and relentlessly bombarded opposition stronghold of Idlib.
The backlash –
fueled
by frustration with the added pressure on public services, finances, and law enforcement, not to mention political fearmongering – left Merkel so wounded that she did not seek reelection as leader of her party this month, and will not stand for reelection as chancellor after her current term expires in 2021.
While cheap money had little impact on business investment, it
fueled
a real estate bubble, which is now bursting, jeopardizing households that borrowed against rising home values to sustain consumption.
Fueled
by the failure of the peace process to deliver an end to Israel's occupation, and by the Old Guard's failure to deliver good governance, the Young Guard allied themselves with radical Islamists.
As globalization of financial markets and the emergence of newly industrialized countries
fueled
demand for credit, the anti-inflationary monetary policies implemented in the early 1980s restricted its supply.
But the increased sense of drift in Euro-Atlantic structures,
fueled
principally by Europe’s financial crisis and America’s prolonged political rift, leaves little room for optimism.
Likewise, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a proposed mega-regional free-trade deal from which China has so far been excluded – has
fueled
concern in China regarding US intentions.
This year, the emerging economies are worried about a tightening of global monetary policy, not the policy loosening that three years ago
fueled
talk of “currency wars.”
A paradigmatic example is the war in Syria: the horrible humanitarian tragedy that has afflicted the country’s population for more than seven years
fueled
a refugee crisis that shook the foundations of the European Union.
Over the last 30 years or so, skill-biased technological change has
fueled
the polarization of both employment and wages, with median workers facing real wage stagnation and non-college-educated workers suffering a significant decline in their real earnings.
That, coupled with the 3% depreciation in the past few months, should send a strong signal to speculators that one-way renminbi bets are hazardous – a signal that could help dampen inflows of hot money, which have complicated liquidity management and
fueled
asset-market volatility in China.
Moreover, for every South Korea, and every Hong Kong, we can also find developing countries where expanding education merely
fueled
competition for white-collar jobs in a bloated, deadweight state bureaucracy.
This has
fueled
a dramatic rise in the return on education and high-level skills, with the share of total income received by owners of capital and high-end employees increasing in advanced countries for more than two decades.
The most immediate question concerns the possibility of another Israel-Hezbollah war, fears of which have mounted throughout this year,
fueled
by reports of new missile transfers to Hezbollah and intermittent threats from Israel.
Imbalances between supply and demand have also
fueled
income inequality, by increasing the wage premia that those with the right skills can command.
But this stance is itself highly risky, not least because it has translated into a willful blindness to the social changes that have
fueled
extremist ideologies – an approach that comes across to many as arrogant.
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