Implies
in sentence
1050 examples of Implies in a sentence
Of course, as Blair suggested, Britain’s first-past-the-post electoral system, based on single-member constituencies,
implies
huge advantages for the established political parties.
The problem with this saying is the paranoid mindset behind it, for it
implies
that the nature of Russian-US relations has not changed fundamentally since the Cold War’s end; that the animosities that exist between the two countries are those of two permanently implacable geopolitical opponents.
Indeed, the partial withdrawal of the US
implies
that the end of the enforced stability of the old Middle East will not spare the Sykes-Picot borders.
That
implies
successfully integrating French immigrants into the wider community with a combination of economic growth, restoration of the authority of the State, but also and above all a far greater sense of solidarity and fraternity.
But, while the many recipes thesis has strong appeal and empirical support, and suggests a spirit of theoretical pluralism, the claim of “one economics” is misguided, for it
implies
that mainstream neoclassical economics is the only true economics.
Contextual intelligence
implies
both a capability to discern trends in the face of complexity and adaptability while trying to shape events.
Over a decade, that
implies
nearly $2 trillion in additional revenue without any increase in tax rates from today’s levels.
But the reasoning is the same, for it is based on the conviction that more America in the world today
implies
less costly and confused interventionism tomorrow.
And the prospect that sanctions on Iran’s oil exports will be phased out
implies
significant inflows of foreign direct investment aimed at increasing production and export capacity.
A second explanation addresses that question: While bold action is required, the complexity of economic conditions, and disagreement about the right policy responses,
implies
a risk of serious error.
That is an exciting development, though initially it
implies
a messier historical narrative.
Their approach, a concept called “Air-Sea Battle,”
implies
a mix of defensive and offensive tools to address the new challenges posed by the proliferation of precision-strike weaponry.
This
implies
an interval of two months between interest-rate moves instead of the three-month interval that has become standard ECB practice in the current interest-rate cycle.
The PCA ruled that China’s “nine-dash line,” a 1940s-era delineation that
implies
ownership by China of 80% of the South China Sea, is legally meaningless.
From China’s perspective, effective defense
implies
the ability to deter the US navy well beyond Japan and the Philippines – into the wide open of the Pacific Ocean.
In the emerging world, China seems to have staved off the risk of a sharp slowdown: while its economy is no longer achieving double-digit growth, its increased size
implies
that, in absolute terms, today’s 7% annual rate exceeds the 10% rates of the past.
This, by contrast,
implies
a need for retrenchment.
Weaning Europe from Russian natural gas makes sense as well, which
implies
halting the Nord Stream II pipeline that is meant to bring gas directly from Russia to Germany, bypassing Ukraine.
I can also understand (though I disagree with) opponents who believe that the short-run stimulus effect of the plan will be small, while America’s weak fiscal position
implies
a large long-run drag on the economy from the costs of servicing the resulting debt.
The prolonged period of renegotiation now proposed by Cameron
implies
high costs for both sides.
The reason is essentially the same throughout Europe: slow economic growth
implies
few prospects for a better life, while the welfare state has failed to create jobs.
That, in turn,
implies
that it is accountable and that it has democratic legitimacy – something fundamentally lacking in multilateral agencies such as the World Bank.
The West thinks that this anger is a sign of some clash of civilizations: “us” against “them,” which
implies
that only one side can win.
One legacy of Western Europe’s experience in the 1980’s is a rule of thumb: each year that lower labor-force attachment and reduced capital stock as a result of declining investment depresses production $100 billion below normal
implies
that productive potential at full employment in future years will be $10 billion below what would otherwise have been forecast.
All of this
implies
that Asian governments will need to play a far greater role than officials in Europe or America in managing both the macro-economy and personal consumption choices, which will require very sensitive political choices regarding individual rights, as well as policies that powerful business interests – many of them Western – will resist.
After all, full separation
implies
that resources from elsewhere in a given banking group are unavailable to address a retail-banking crisis resulting from, say, a slump in residential and commercial property prices.
This
implies
that, while the first two arrows are helping to improve Japan’s actual growth path, the third arrow has yet to do much for potential growth.
Greater stability in the Middle East, which
implies
a settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, together with more effective integration of Muslims in our societies based on social justice and a stronger humanistic message, are the key elements of a cohesive Western strategy.
All of this burgeoning interdependence
implies
vulnerabilities that governments and non-governmental actors can exploit.
This
implies
a dramatic slowdown in investment and long-term growth rates unless offsetting increases in productivity emerge.
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