Implied
in sentence
404 examples of Implied in a sentence
Agreement to create both a liquidity-provision facility and an insolvency procedure has
implied
revisiting fundamental principles – not least the no-bailout clause – showing that Europe can learn from experience.
Corporate America and capital markets ought to reinforce that message, not as a political statement, but as a warning that a US economy that sacrifices the opportunities
implied
by the sustainability agenda will be less attractive to investors – and thus less prosperous.
In fact, analysts who are bullish on Venezuelan debt have been lobbying the government and opposition leaders with an
implied
threat: even considering a restructuring of your bonds, they point out, will allow those managing your assets to cause havoc in Venezuela.
Granted, the credit boom itself may be rooted in excessive optimism surrounding the economic-growth potential
implied
by globalization and new technologies.
Thus, along with tremendous opportunities
implied
by globalization, political risks must also be addressed.
The Bush administration, predictably, is pushing for new and tougher sanctions, based on an
implied
warning in the earlier UN Resolution, and arguing, as it did in the run-up to the invasion in Iraq, that the UN’s credibility is at stake.
Success
implied
expansion of such public goods as widespread university education.
But now that British Prime Minister Theresa May has
implied
that she prefers a “hard” Brexit, a gloomy long-term prognosis is probably correct.
But, unlike banks, they do not have the safety net
implied
by central banks’ role as lender of last resort.
The same group has also benefited from the leverage
implied
by strong credit growth.
But, given the uncertainty
implied
by Bhumibol’s death, and the prospect of an unpopular crown prince eventually reigning, stability seems unlikely any time soon.
In Europe, despite the large external deficits in some of the European Union’s southern and eastern members at the outset of the crisis and the fetters
implied
by the euro, the fall in GDP was held to less than 10% in hard-hit Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.
To cite one dramatic example, declining economic indicators caused the
implied
market pricing of an interest-rate hike ahead of the Bank of England’s policy meeting this month to plummet from over 90%, or a near-certainty, to 20% in just a few weeks.
Deteriorating economic conditions at home
implied
stricter limits on American intervention abroad.
Of course, any pre-election policy ideas might fall victim to political deals or simply the massive uncertainty
implied
by the recent election result.
The combination of strong growth, low inflation, and easy money
implied
that market volatility was low.
Given the upward pressure on prices
implied
by rising emerging-market demand and the global economy’s rapid increase in size, that day has arrived.
During the heat of the 2008 financial crisis, for example, the inflation-indexed yield in the US rose so high for a brief period that
implied
annual inflation for the next seven years suddenly dropped to -1.5%.
It is this
implied
social contract that is now endangered by economic collapse.
The global economy’s downturn increases countries’ political risk to varying degrees, depending on the severity of the shock and the nature of the
implied
social contract.
Analysts also must pay attention to the nature of the
implied
social contract.
For example, the Chinese and Indian economies’ continued growth and development reflects the fact that President Xi Jinping and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, respectively, understand the economic and social challenges and opportunities
implied
by the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
Perhaps the most optimistic note came from the emerging markets: while the risk of globalization was that it
implied
a new interdependence, so that flawed economic policies in the US and Europe could torpedo developing countries’ economies, the more successful emerging markets have managed globalization well enough to sustain growth in the face of failures in the West.
Moreover, this tendency should have been accentuated by the fact that the productivity shock reflected a decline in the global capital-to-labor ratio
implied
by the integration of Chinese and Indian workers into the global economy.
Such an economic collapse, rare outside wartime, understates the extent of human suffering
implied
by the prolonged food and medicine scarcities that plague the country.
In current dollars, each cost about $200 billion – a mere fraction of what the United States has paid for the Iraq war, and less than the cost
implied
by the rise in oil prices over the past year.
But rather than being “pulled” by the attractiveness of the economic policies that the right is advocating, this complex phenomenon is predominantly a reflection of the “push”
implied
by anemic growth and the disappointing provision of public goods, especially social services.
But has the US become so withdrawn from the world that it is willing to pay only a symbolic price, such as that
implied
by Russia’s tit-for-tat sanctions, to stop aggression that threatens the international order?
With a climate outcome as weak and costly as the one
implied
by the Paris agreement, such opportunities cannot arrive too soon.
The dysfunctional system of European fiscal governance should be dismantled; fiscal responsibility should be returned to member states; and, to minimize the risk of excessive future lending, private lenders should be required to bear the losses
implied
by unsustainable sovereign debt.
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