Historically
in sentence
858 examples of Historically in a sentence
Historically, information in China was controlled by the Communist Party, making popular opinion irrelevant.
Though mass sexual abuse is not unheard of in Europe, it has
historically
occurred only during conflicts – for example, during the Balkan wars of the 1990s and in the areas occupied by the Soviet Red Army at the end of World War II.
Historically, the biggest threat to the IMF has been irrelevance.
Historically, rising states used smart-power strategies to good avail.
He linked the various strands of popular myth with
historically
frightful characters to cement the association of Eastern Europe with obscurantism and darkness in the popular imagination of the West.
The GFSR confidently noted that “stress tests conducted by investment banks show that, even under scenarios of nationwide house price declines that are
historically
unprecedented, most investors with exposure to subprime mortgages through securitized structures will not face losses.”
Historically, the principal agents of reef degradation have been over-fishing and pollution, not global warming.
In Europe, the average ratio of home prices to incomes is slightly below its long-term average, mainly because housing prices in Germany are at
historically
low levels by this measure.
Historically, it has taken countries many years of difficult fiscal-policy efforts to regain a triple-A status.
Almost every modern analyst, however, has come to the conclusion that Weber’s attempt to link that capitalist spirit
historically
to a form of Christianity, namely Protestantism, is fatally flawed.
For legal scholars, most prominently Columbia University’s John Coffee, stock exchanges have
historically
been the first step toward protecting investors.
Historically, in fact, most advanced economies have lived with far higher fiscal deficits than they have today, and not only during wartime.
Historically, the Fed has typically been slow to respond to inflation.
The Danish “flexicurity” system, in particular, has
historically
delivered solid economic performance alongside low inequality.
But the US may be uniquely resilient: because it has
historically
been the global safe haven in times of economic uncertainty, it may be less affected than other countries by political unpredictability.
Japan has made more than its fair share of financial contributions to the United Nations and its organizations, both
historically
and today.
Moreover, post-independence improvements in child survival triggered a rise in child dependency rates, which also reached
historically
unprecedented levels in the 1970’s and 1980’s.
Though causality is elusive, there has
historically
been a high correlation between inequality and political polarization, which is one reason why successful developing-country growth strategies have relied heavily on inclusiveness.
Moreover, migration has
historically
been the most effective measure against poverty.
Historically, whatever happens on one side of the Mediterranean has had a direct impact on the other; given today’s high level of global interdependence, there is every reason to believe that this will remain true.
They knew that they were fighting evil in an environment that was
historically
and culturally familiar.
Despite India’s
historically
established territorial claims to the region, China terms the area “disputed,” a description that it has now begun to extend to the whole of the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.
So, too, do the world’s super-rich, whose degree of wealth is
historically
unprecedented.
Exit-driven venture capital might be appropriate for gadgets; but technological revolutions have
historically
required patient, committed public financing.
In the face of relentless settlement expansion, failed evacuation of outposts, and the construction of new Jewish neighborhoods in areas that never belonged, either geographically or historically, to the city of Jerusalem, the doves should take an unequivocal stance and say: stop, enough.
Having
historically
punched above its weight internationally, Japan is responding to China’s muscular rise by strengthening its own position in the region.
Historically, an important spur toward corporatist thinking was Gustave Le Bon’s 1895 book The Crowd, which coined the terms “crowd psychology” and “collective mind.”
But he also must manage the broader front of countries that are participating in
historically
strong sanctions against an abhorrent state.
Foreign capital flooded in again, and the new consensus view was that bond-driven capital inflows would impose market discipline on Latin America’s
historically
profligate governments, because, presumably, only credit-worthy agents would be able to borrow.
Historically, small, strategically oriented states have wielded global power.
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