Fueled
in sentence
825 examples of Fueled in a sentence
French politics has no analogue to America’s alt-right milieu – with its conspiracy theories, talk shows, online trolling, and fake news – that
fueled
Trump’s campaign.
Natural gas, not environmental regulation, has
fueled
the demise of the US coal industry.
Just as QE’s introduction
fueled
currency appreciation, announcing its eventual end triggered depreciation.
Although China has become Japan’s largest partner in trade and foreign direct investment, nationalists in the two countries have
fueled
each other’s extremism, while their governments play with fire.
And it will not help fight the world’s biggest environmental killer: indoor air pollution, which is mostly caused by open fires
fueled
by wood, cardboard, and dung, and claims 3.8 million lives annually.
The financial sector’s explosive growth over the past two decades has
fueled
the accumulation of exceptionally large volumes of debt.
In Europe, the pre-crisis boom in real-estate investment was
fueled
by reckless credit flows from Northern to Southern Europe.
But central banks’ successes
fueled
excessively high expectations, which encouraged most policymakers to leave their monetary counterparts largely responsible for macroeconomic management.
The recovery was ultimately
fueled
by so-called “subprime” mortgages: home-purchase loans extended to borrowers with lower credit ratings.
But such partnerships can’t be taken for granted on a continent where the quest for natural resources has
fueled
decades of violent conflict.
In the 2002 presidential election, frustration with the system
fueled
strong support for the extremes, with Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the far right, qualifying for the second-round runoff.
The third wave, from 1989 to 1992, was
fueled
by the disintegration of the Soviet Union, which caused output there to collapse.
If China’s economic slowdown persists – as those following investment booms and
fueled
by debt overhangs often do –the commodity downturn is likely to continue, as no other economy is capable of picking up the demand slack.
These factors, together with the obvious failings of many Middle Eastern governments, have
fueled
the surge of fundamentalism among Muslims, American Christians, and some Israeli Jews that has now boiled over to rampant extremism, terror, and messianic visions of good versus evil.
Given the prevailing paranoia,
fueled
by propaganda and genuine ignorance, on both sides of the border, it is possible that our hosts were being excessively cautious.
This much we know: terrorism is
fueled
by anger and frustration.
For example, though the Gulf states have a very young native population, their economies are
fueled
mainly by the expatriates who constitute more than 30% of the region’s inhabitants (estimates vary widely).
Nonetheless, the transformative wave
fueled
by young people’s frustration remains full of energy and potential.
Major technological advances
fueled
by cheap money can cause markets to change so fast that policy and institutional change cannot keep up.
The 2008 crisis cast a harsh spotlight on just how bad we are at responding quickly to disasters, especially those
fueled
by fragmented governance.
But, in the 1840’s, mass immigration,
fueled
by the Irish potato famine, altered the state’s demographic balance, enabling populists to gain control of the legislature.
This differs sharply from the experience of the 1930s, when moderates’ failure to attract a large enough share of the Spanish right
fueled
deepening polarization and, ultimately, civil war.
Indeed, it is the financial sector’s prosperity, driven partly by the success of market-oriented innovations, that has
fueled
growth in China’s M2 and credit assets.
Since then, China’s unremitting investment in infrastructure and real estate has
fueled
domestic demand, absorbing and reinforcing this credit growth.
All of this
fueled
rising risk across China’s financial sector, while intensifying pressure on the real economy.
This is where Israel stands today, facing a political upheaval
fueled
by two developments.
But the public debate that this controversy has
fueled
has not been entirely constructive.
Fueled
by the injection of taxpayers’ money, American capitalism is back in force.
It seems counterproductive to put Hungary and Poland into one basket, and thereby drive them even further into an “alliance of the scorned”
fueled
more by convenience than real common interests.
But what really matters is whether, after the summit, China takes concrete actions that reflect a genuine shift from the policies that have
fueled
the deterioration in bilateral ties.
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