Hence
in sentence
1057 examples of Hence in a sentence
There is no supra-national body that will enforce the Kyoto Protocol;
hence
Canada’s disappointing decision to leave the process.
Moreover, inflation rates are not high and
hence
will not rapidly eliminate this real depreciation.
And it is also a fact that we are happier saving and accumulating if we receive positive and negative feedback on our decisions on a time scale that allows us to believe that we can do better next time by altering our strategy –
hence
marketwatch.com
Because no society can ensure complete equality, "welfare democracy" feeds dissatisfaction and frustration - and
hence
demands for more welfare democracy, not less.
Hence, the recent evolution of Puerto Rican bond prices reflects an expectation that the additional funds will go not to Puerto Ricans still suffering from the devastating effects of Maria, but rather to the commonwealth’s creditors.
When we resort to psychologically comforting but misleading assumptions about terrorism, we hamper our own understanding of political violence in general – and
hence
weaken our ability to avert or minimize it.
Hence, nationalist politicians often resort to nostalgic rhetoric to mobilize their older supporters.
The cost of sending such help would be around $50 million, and the benefits would be $200 million to $300 million in increased food production next year (and
hence
less needed in emergency food aid).
Hence
the fierce (albeit arcane and polite) dispute between the two sides at the International Monetary Fund’s recent meeting in Lima, Peru.
Governments, for their part, will come out of the crisis more heavily indebted, which implies higher future taxes, less investment, and
hence
slower rates of growth.
Moreover, with excess reliance on domestic demand, the structure of the US economy evolved with a bias toward the non-tradable sector (where all of the new jobs were created) and insufficient reliance on foreign demand and
hence
exports.
Hence, as in Phaedrus’s fable, the Kremlin’s “justifications” are empty.
There are simply too many things – from the “prospect of a European war” to the “price of copper and the interest rate 20 years hence” – about which “there is no scientific basis on which to form any calculable probability whatever.”
The ultimate reason for their lack of preparation is that our insurance industry was not covering their tsunami risks, and
hence
not offering up-to-date disaster-prevention guidance.
Hence
the incentives of the NDB’s prospective creditors and borrowers are happily aligned.
Hence, war initiated by the North, while not unthinkable, seems unlikely.
Hence, the West need not bear any responsibility for the outcome.
Hence, his solution is to destroy the global order and then negotiate with other countries on a bilateral basis.
Hence, a new law grants refugees just one year to reclaim their property before the government seizes it; and other bureaucratic requirements seem designed to allow Syrian authorities to refuse reentry to anyone they don’t like.
The generosity of the US system--and
hence
the burden of layoff taxes--is limited.
As long as the Saudi regime meets America’s oil needs and fights Islamist radicals, it will continue to receive US support and silence – and
hence
its tacit consent.
So the Syrian leadership knows that it must respond –
hence
the half-hearted reform agenda that it recently outlined.
But if the government starts reducing its own deficit before private-sector spending recovers, the net result will be a further decline in total spending, and
hence
in total income, causing the government’s deficit to widen, rather than narrow.
Then there is the most fundamental – and
hence
easily overlooked – difference of all.
With the demise of the Soviet Union, according to this argument, the bi-polar balance of power vanished and America became the world's only superpower, engendering resentment and envy - and
hence
a difficult time for US-European relations.
Hence, such a move would probably be enough to restore much of the AKP’s lost support and to calm opponents who fear that their personal freedoms will continue to erode under its governance.
Less obvious, but more pernicious, is the insinuation that citizens who do not share the populist’s conception of “the people,” and
hence
do not support the populist politically, are less than legitimate members of the polity.
Hence
their mantra: no additional taxes.
Conventional and reformist politicians look alike and
hence
elicit the same response from much of the electorate.
The two-thirds decline in aggregate imports from 1929 to 1933 was only partly a result of falling incomes, and
hence
import demand; retaliatory trade and exchange-rate policies also played a major role in bringing about the global trade collapse.
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