Guarantee
in sentence
1236 examples of Guarantee in a sentence
Government should
guarantee
(and, if necessary, pay for) education that is good enough to deliver the skills that allow citizens to interact as democratic equals.
If the US had not responded to the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons, the entire world would have asked what a US
guarantee
is worth if an American president’s “red line” is crossed without consequences.
By voting for the fiscal treaty, we can
guarantee
that stability and support – and thus
guarantee
continued confidence and investment in the Irish economy.
Europe's new constitution will be accepted as a
guarantee
of freedom and lawful government only if it results from a broad public dialogue reflecting the common cultural and moral assumptions that bind Europeans together.
A US that moves toward isolationist nationalism will remain the world’s most powerful country by a wide margin; but it will no longer
guarantee
Western countries’ security or defend an international order based on free trade and globalization.
Here, the challenge for host states is to
guarantee
adequate provision of essential services.
In order to
guarantee
national security, the Strategy is categorical – without giving in to the temptation of isolationism – in admitting the strategic value of the example and the importance of doing one’s homework first.
We are in a transition period: international interconnection is increasing, as the global economic crisis has shown, but the management tools and mechanisms to
guarantee
the smooth operation of governments are still not being shared.
Structural reforms are important to
guarantee
future sustainable growth, but they do not generate growth in the short term, which is what Europe needs.
But Europe, too, has a stake in maintaining the transatlantic bond, for there is no
guarantee
that it will remain an island of stability and prosperity.
Essentially, the government
guarantee
associated with financing public-sector investment is being withdrawn – as it should be.
When North Korea achieves nuclear-power status, the American security
guarantee
will no longer be airtight.
Nor did the Hamiltonian scheme of federal finance
guarantee
a peaceful commonwealth.
The federal assumption of states’ debts by itself could not
guarantee
political order.
In their book Why Nations Fail, Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson argue that societies with political arrangements that concentrate power in the hands of a few seldom excel at innovation and growth, because innovators have no
guarantee
they will keep the fruits of their labors.
NGOs continue to be called upon in multilateral policy processes, such as helping to implement the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals or
guarantee
the outcomes of the Paris climate agreement.
Of course, democratization does not automatically
guarantee
better behavior on the world stage.
The European Central Bank’s role is fundamental for both, as well as in continuing to promote growth (both through expansionary monetary policy and by facilitating market access for countries whose financing still depends on the ECB’s implicit guarantee).
The newly released growth data may have dispelled fears of a hard landing for China, but have nonetheless prompted many to argue that China must stimulate its economy further to
guarantee
8% annual growth.
One new “democratic” amendment would create an ombudsman’s office – long demanded by the European Union – but without a
guarantee
of autonomy.
But that is no
guarantee
that they will remain rich after the payments stop.
The lesson from America is that economic growth is no
guarantee
of wellbeing or political stability.
The ECB’s expansive “whatever it takes”
guarantee
may indeed be enough to help finance greater short-term stimulus than is currently being allowed; but the ECB’s
guarantee
will not solve long-run sustainability problems.
Unfortunately, the new law – hastily enacted at the last minute of the previous legislature – has a silly formulation that does not
guarantee
an equally safe majority in the Senate.
The IMF could
guarantee
the central banks against market risk at current prices.
If successful, the IMF
guarantee
would never be invoked.
Governments can, however, provide a credible guarantee, given their power to tax.
But, in the meantime, governments can call upon the European Central Bank, which the eurozone member states already fully
guarantee
on a pro rata basis.
In exchange for a guarantee, the eurozone’s major banks would have to agree to abide by the ECB’s instructions.
European policymakers should also
guarantee
non-discriminatory wholesale access to communications networks, and that consumers and businesses have a range of choices for telecommunications and online services.
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