Inclusive
in sentence
1051 examples of Inclusive in a sentence
With the right incentives and funding from philanthropic sources, job-creating entrepreneurs could serve as engines of more
inclusive
growth in communities across the US.
Thanks to a research collaboration on
inclusive
growth with MasterCard and an anonymized donation of data to the Center for International Development at Harvard University, we are starting to shed some light on this mystery.
Like Cook, being in the minority informed my propensity to be an
inclusive
leader.
Research conducted by the Center for Talent Innovation shows that allies – people who support LGBT colleagues or work as advocates – play a decisive role in creating an
inclusive
community.
Finally, companies should continue to facilitate an
inclusive
workplace for everyone, not just LGBT employees.
He must now follow up by creating an open,
inclusive
environment, like India’s, that will enable both Sinhalese and Tamils to thrive.
Marshaling a sufficiently comprehensive response to extreme financial stress becomes even more difficult, if not enough was done during the good times to ensure sustainable and
inclusive
growth.
Indeed, advanced-country politicians today still seem to be ignoring the limitations of an economic model that relies excessively on finance to create sustainable,
inclusive
growth.
Worse, the growth that they did achieve in the years after the crisis was not inclusive; instead, the excessively wide income, wealth, and opportunity gaps in many advanced economies endured.
Trudeau, by contrast, has vowed to be a very different type of leader, promising to pursue an
inclusive
approach to policymaking and to allow his ministers to take much greater responsibility for their portfolios.
Its central mission is to reduce global poverty and ensure that global development is environmentally sound and socially
inclusive.
We face a historic responsibility: we need to modernize the French economy, and introduce in a few months a decade’s worth of reforms to generate stronger, more
inclusive
growth, create more jobs, and shrink public deficits.
I firmly believe that with the implementation of these structural reforms, Mexicans will be able to resolve the country’s most pressing problems and build a more prosperous, inclusive, and productive country.
We need more
inclusive
institutions and mechanisms that provide assurances and guarantees to all.
The tone set by Murdoch, however, suggests that a consensus on sustainable,
inclusive
growth will be hard to achieve.
Viewed in the context of such comments, one can better understand Australia’s refusal to put issues of climate change and
inclusive
prosperity on the Brisbane agenda.
The bigger challenge, though, is hitting those growth targets in a sustainable and
inclusive
way.
Australia’s refusal to discuss
inclusive
growth in Brisbane may please plutocrats like Murdoch, but talk of unregulated markets, lower taxes, and the removal of social safety nets strongly indicates that the summit will offer no substantive policies aimed at reducing inequality.
We need a new treaty for the twenty-first century that is balanced, inclusive, and comprehensive – one that all nations can embrace.
With the G-7 leaders having committed, in a recent joint declaration, to tackle “antimicrobial resistance” (AMR), it is time for the more
inclusive
G-20 – and China, as it chairs the group for the first time – to take the fight to the next level.
One dramatic way to seize the initiative would be to build on Japan’s existing initiatives in post-conflict peace-building with a proposal for an
inclusive
plan for Asia’s defense and security.
The hard part of constructing
inclusive
growth strategies is not knowing where you want to end up so much as figuring out how to get there.
This calls for a new form of
inclusive
multilateralism – one that can also be applied to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, which complement the Paris agreement’s commitments.
On the contrary, devising solutions should be a high priority, with the policy debate centering on measures that would help to create truly
inclusive
economies.
The goal should be to attack inequality on two fronts: ensuring that pre-tax incomes rise in a more
inclusive
fashion and strengthening the equalizing role of taxes and transfers.
Rodrigo de Rato, Zoellick’s counterpart at the European-dominated International Monetary Fund, has already suggested that his successor should be chosen in a more
inclusive
process.
One of those international organizations is the World Bank Group, which engages with countries to help protect the poor and vulnerable, improve resilience to refugee and migration shocks, and ensure
inclusive
and accountable service delivery.
In many ways, the foundations for building more
inclusive
societies – societies that are ultimately richer and politically stable – must be laid in the countryside.
These countries urgently need structural reforms that can generate more
inclusive
economic growth and political institutions that channel, rather than suppress, legitimate popular demands.
Policies that encourage ICT adoption are the right choice for long-term and
inclusive
economic growth.
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