Inclusion
in sentence
607 examples of Inclusion in a sentence
Korea’s relatively low ranking reflects the
inclusion
of North Korea.
The acknowledgement by the IMF board, which represents all 188 of the Fund’s member countries, that the renminbi meets “all existing criteria” for
inclusion
in the SDR basket is another step forward along this path of progress.
Given this, the IMF could easily have rejected the renminbi’s bid for
inclusion
in the SDR basket, as it did five years ago.
Despite these challenges, China’s leaders anticipate that, in the longer term, the renminbi’s
inclusion
in the SDR basket will help to bring about the currency’s steady appreciation and, by serving as a kind of certification of credibility, support its continued internationalization.
In short, the
inclusion
of the renminbi in the SDR basket does matter, and not just symbolically.
For many others, the Dream referred to the hope of America’s deprived – stirred by Eleanor Roosevelt, Martin Luther King, Jr., John Rawls, and Richard Rorty – that their country would somehow end the injustice of pay so low that it isolates them from the life of the country: the dream of
inclusion.
And, despite the resistance of Saudi Arabia and the Sunni opposition, the US and the EU currently seem more inclined to accept Iran’s
inclusion
in the Geneva II negotiations, especially now that advances are being made in the implementation of the international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program concluded in November.
Since its launch, the SCO’s military exercises have become increasingly ambitious, growing from largely bi-lateral to
inclusion
of all members.
Every one of these future refugees will need access, at some point, to medical professionals trained in refugee health, diversity, and
inclusion.
With the right approach, connecting people through ICT could empower women, expand access to health care, boost financial inclusion, close the gap between urban and rural areas, and open up new business models, particularly for SMEs.
To address the problem requires investing in inclusion, endowing people with skills, and connecting them to the inputs and networks that can make them productive.
Of course, capturing this surplus may allow for income redistribution, as many suggest; but a much bigger and sustainable bang can be achieved if the proceeds go instead to financing
inclusion.
In the end, inclusive growth may generate a more prosperous and egalitarian society, whereas redistribution may fail to benefit either
inclusion
or growth.
Rather, it means ensuring inclusion, so that no one is denied the opportunity to participate in the betterment of their lives and their communities.
This year, the European Commission has requested that all EU member states develop and implement strategies to promote Roma social
inclusion
in these areas.
Will the world of cognitive surplus make it easier for us to be environmentally responsible, guided also by the
inclusion
of externalities in the prices of physical goods, so that we end up “consuming” fewer physical things and spend more on virtual value?
The prevailing belief in a reliable tendency to return to some normal degree of
inclusion
has little ground to stand on.
Both Europe and the US must do more to promote low-wage workers’
inclusion.
If economic stagnation continues, and if the challenges of expanding economic
inclusion
are not addressed, Hirschman’s theory of political ruin may become prescient.
In the last 16 years alone, the number of people who qualify for
inclusion
in the global middle class – at today’s level, people with net financial assets of €7,000-42,000 ($7,400-$44,600) – has more than doubled, to over one billion, or about 20% of the world population.
Increasing financial
inclusion
requires fundamentally rethinking how a country’s financial system is structured and operates.
Likewise, in 2011, the Bank of Tanzania made a specific commitment to increase financial
inclusion
under the Alliance for Financial Inclusion’s Maya Declaration, a commitment by policymakers in the developing world to unlock the social and economic potential of the poor.
Many of the good-governance agenda’s key goals – empowerment, inclusion, participation, integrity, transparency, and accountability – can be built into workable solutions, not because outsiders demand them, but because effective solutions require them.
It has also intensified its effort to make the renminbi an international reserve currency, pushing for its
inclusion
in the basket of currencies that makes up the IMF’s unit of account, the Special Drawing Right.
In low-income countries with very low financial
inclusion
rates, such as Nigeria, Ethiopia, and India, GDP could increase by as much as 12%.
As for financial inclusion, digital finance has two positive effects.
Financial
inclusion
becomes profitable for providers even when account balances and transactions are small.
Financial
inclusion
is vital for inclusive economic growth and gender equality, and it has assumed a prominent role in global development efforts, with the World Bank aiming for universal financial
inclusion
by 2020.
On the other hand, intra-regional ruptures were an indication of the deterioration of Latin America’s current collective negotiating power, despite the
inclusion
of Argentina, Brazil and Mexico in the G-20.
The region’s performance during the global financial crisis has not hidden fundamental problems: the heavy burden of an unrealized agenda of social
inclusion
and a combination of inequality and injustice that could turn lethal in the near future.
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