Funding
in sentence
2082 examples of Funding in a sentence
Adaptation
funding
from public sources reached $23-26 billion in 2012-2013.
But much more financing will be needed to prevent a
funding
gap after 2020.
Of course,
funding
is not the only component of a successful adaptation strategy.
This has meant
funding
school guards, fortifications, and surveillance equipment to reassure parents and pupils that everything possible is being done to ensure their school is safe to attend.
Investors
funding
the capital inflow and the country receiving the money always think up reasons why this time the inflow is sustainable, because it reflects some supposed permanent transformation of fundamentals.
They also estimated a minimum level of investment, below which
funding
would never be sufficient to build a fusion power plant.
But Alfi says it’s been challenging to find outside funding, and he is not alone.
The declaration stated only that participants “noted” the need for at least $1.4 billion in annual
funding.
The UN refugee agency’s
funding
for Syria, which supports humanitarian agencies and development aid for neighboring countries, has received about one-third of the $4.5 billion needed this year.
The World Food Program, a backbone of the refugee system, has met only two-thirds of its 2015
funding
needs, compelling it to slash support to hundreds of thousands of Syrians.
But global action must go well beyond offers of temporary or permanent refuge for the displaced, or
funding
for frontline countries.
The procedures to trigger this intervention, however, are complex and the
funding
is sufficiently opaque that the bill will not eliminate collateral damage from a large bank failure even for US institutions, let alone for international ones, whose unwinding would require coordination by several states, with varying degree of solvency.
But the hard truth is that current
funding
for research and development to address the health needs of the world’s poorest people is insufficient.
If we want to achieve the targets established by the Global Goals for maternal health, child health, and infectious disease, we will have to double R&D
funding
by 2020.
But the consensus about the benefits – both for the children and society – does not extend to delivery and
funding.
In Poland’s case, the annual
funding
gap, which had to be covered by more government borrowing, reached 2.4% of GDP in 2010.
It soon became obvious that, given Poland’s constitutional 60%-of-GDP debt limit and 3%-of-GDP cap on the budget deficit, together with the squeeze on public finances in the wake of the global financial crisis, the OFE
funding
model was unsustainable.
The government refuses to sacrifice future pensions, or financial stability, for the sake of short-term
funding
goals.
But, as Bruce Katz and Luise Noring have documented, in many cities in America and around the world, elected officials, civic organizations, and private business often unite beyond party lines to design and find
funding
for innovative projects in public transport, housing, or economic development.
Aside from shaky funding, the harm-reduction efforts in Russia, and to a large degree in Ukraine, lack a fundamental tool: opiate-substitution treatment.
Dampening the repo market could be economically useful, because this
funding
has proven to be unstable: Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers used repo heavily in ways that made them unable to withstand investment reversals elsewhere in their business.
Donor countries should provide ample replenishment
funding
later this year to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria, which would ensure this vital agency’s continued success.
The Millennium Development Goals, due to expire in 2015, succeeded because they marshaled international resources and
funding
to address a focused set of poverty-related issues.
The benefits system should be streamlined so that it becomes centered on the person, rather than being managed according to specific programs and categorical
funding
streams.
Our aim is to leverage an initial $2 billion in guaranteed
funding
during the first
funding
cycle.
More recently, Shaked approved the “loyalty in culture bill,” which would make government cultural
funding
contingent on the recipient’s “loyalty” to the Jewish state.
The
funding
gap is beyond what existing international financial institutions can meet – and the advanced countries’ malaise means that significant recapitalization is not in the cards.
Indeed, his minister of education recently declared that
funding
for Britain’s universities would be slashed by as much as 40%.
Ever since, Republican governments in the US have slashed
funding
for ballet, poetry in schools, and sculpture, while demagogues like former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani have gained political traction by attacking controversial visual arts.
By slashing the
funding
for the institutions which created that civilization, Cameron has guaranteed that tomorrow’s Britain will be a nation not of world-class politicians, writers, and cultural innovators, but of wonky technocrats raised on bad TV, with little influence beyond their tiny island.
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