Historically
in sentence
858 examples of Historically in a sentence
The United States has
historically
been the world’s largest donor to global food security programs, but the future of this leadership role under President Donald Trump is uncertain.
But such an abdication would be
historically
– and dangerously – shortsighted.
In India, certain
historically
disadvantaged groups (particularly among the lower castes) are now politically assertive.
Creditors, asserting their right to be repaid in full,
historically
have created as many legal and political obstacles to default as possible, insisting on harsh sanctions – garnishment of income, for example, and, at the extreme, imprisonment or even slavery – for borrowers’ failure to honor their debt obligations.
Market reforms eventually resulted in
historically
high growth rates.
Historically, 3% growth during a recovery is far from impressive.
Instead, policymakers should focus on supporting employment and productivity gains –
historically
the most potent weapons against poverty.
China has
historically
approached broad-scale relief of troubled assets through three channels – capital injections, asset-management companies (AMCs), and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) – all of which have serious downsides.
Should Iran possess the ultimate weapon, it might embrace a new restraint in its foreign policy; nuclear-weapons states, precisely because they confront the prospect of nuclear retaliation, have
historically
tread with caution.
Historically, interest-rate hikes have had little effect.
Historically, that of course includes the Nazis, who were National Socialists, and Mussolini, who began his political life as a socialist activist.
Bangladesh’s central bank has incorporated into its regulatory framework capital-steerage requirements that favor
historically
credit-starved rural enterprises.
After a long and spectacular “bonanza” in commodity prices since the early 2000s, driven largely by China’s investment boom, many commodity exporters found themselves with
historically
high levels of foreign-exchange reserves.
To increase commercial banks’ reserves, the Fed
historically
used open-market operations, buying Treasury bills from them.
The banks exchanged an interest-paying Treasury bill for a reserve deposit at the Fed that
historically
did not earn any interest.
Exposure to the outside world through travel, satellite TV, and the Internet has increased public demand for political rights, including the democratic representation that state paternalism has
historically
denied.
Figuring out which side is right requires, first and foremost, an understanding of the six ways that humans have
historically
created value: through our legs, our fingers, our mouths, our brains, our smiles, and our minds.
Up to now, the global financial crisis was
historically
remarkable in having no major impact on foreign-exchange markets.
As the figure shows, these targets are roughly in line with what has
historically
been considered their fair share, though each could do slightly more.
Historically, the US has been able to conclude trade agreements only when a coalition of actors that would benefit from better export opportunities secured more votes than those who were vulnerable to import competition.
Historically, it has always been subject to more prior restraints than has speech.
Africa’s relationship with Western donors, for example, has
historically
placed individual rights over national rights.
Historically, a few small countries were lucky to have exports fill the gap in aggregate demand as public expenditure contracted, enabling them to avoid austerity’s depressing effects.
The renminbi’s exchange rate has
historically
been fixed daily by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), without regard to underlying market sentiment, and allowed to trade within very narrow limits.
Given the significant role that natural resources have
historically
played in global strategic relations – including driving armed interventions and full-scale wars – increasingly murky resource geopolitics threatens to exacerbate existing tensions among Asian countries.
Second, the
historically
large majority of seats that LREM is set to win, owing to low turnout and the 12.5% threshold for going on to the second round of voting, means that a new and very different French political landscape is emerging.
But the necessity of monitoring border walls points to one of the fundamental truths about them: historically, most have proved to be pretty useless.
Though the American banking system
historically
featured thousands of small banks, the “too big to fail” phenomenon is not exactly new.
They
historically
have feuded over tactics and strategy, but, since the deficit is the difference between revenues and outlays, they are closely interconnected.
This unprecedented intrusion into areas
historically
reserved for the states would handcuff directors and boards, shut out the vast majority of retail shareholders, and exacerbate the short-term focus that is now seen as one of the root causes of the financial crisis.”
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