Increasingly
in sentence
5191 examples of Increasingly in a sentence
But it has ample scope for expanding the supply of personal and business services for a desperately underserved,
increasingly
prosperous domestic market.
As a result, if the price of soy continues to fall, subsidies – a source of corruption and patronage – will be an
increasingly
heavy burden for public spending.
Similarly, where structural reforms should rein in price growth by encouraging competition, leaders like Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, finding it
increasingly
difficult to marshal support for unpopular measures, are watering down already-modest proposals to enhance labor-market flexibility.
But, increasingly, the many issues wrapped up in the bilateral relationship are anachronistic.
The need to redress that imbalance has become
increasingly
evident since the recent financial crisis, as banks' efforts to rebuild their capital bases (and meet stricter regulatory requirements) has led to credit rationing.
High Tensions In the Low CountriesBelgium and the Netherlands, two founding members of the European Union, are
increasingly
divided about what that project now means.
Moreover, the
increasingly
activist government has left businesses uneasy about future regulatory and tax measures, and thus reluctant to invest.
Thus, as the Kremlin dreams of re-establishing its domination over what Russians refer to as the “near abroad” (Ukraine, Belarus, the Baltic countries, and the other post-Soviet states), China is
increasingly
looking at Russia as its own “near abroad.”
Indeed, the growing disconnect between
increasingly
aggressive policy actions and strains in the financial market is scary.
They can pin their hopes on China, where monetary policy will become more expansionary, according to Fudan University’s Zhang Jun, or on Europe, where the European Central Bank is providing
increasingly
powerful stimulus as monetary union evolves into a “deeper political union,” according to ECB President Mario Draghi.
His slogan, “Make America Great Again,” is aimed at those who are frustrated that the US can no longer impose its will on an
increasingly
confusing world.
Hillary Clinton, trying to straddle the divide between the two wings of the Democratic Party, is
increasingly
leaning to the left as Sanders draws enormous crowds, something she has yet to accomplish.
And these policies (or policy shifts) are
increasingly
affecting other economies and the global system, giving rise to what might be called “policy externalities” – that is, consequences that extend outside policymakers’ target environment.
Finally, public purchases of domestic assets to stabilize asset prices and net capital flows will become
increasingly
common.
But this approach is becoming
increasingly
difficult to justify.
By opting for cooperation, China can avoid a situation in which Japan is tempted to play an
increasingly
independent security role, which in some respects it is already beginning to do – indeed, in some significant respects.
Now, increasingly, the great divide and the big questions facing us will pertain to the internalities of existence, to the self, rather than to the outside.
Forests ensure water supplies, counter soil erosion, and safeguard an abundance of genetic resources that will become
increasingly
important in developing the new products, pharmaceuticals, and crop strains needed to support the lives and livelihoods of more than nine billion people by 2050.
But, if we
increasingly
associate ourselves with the world at large, our loyalties will expand, too.
Political leaders plead impotence, intellectuals dream up implausible global-governance schemes, and the losers
increasingly
blame immigrants or imports.
Other countries in the region will have to follow suit and reform their economic systems, or face the wrath of their
increasingly
disgruntled citizens.
Collective bargaining, once left to economic actors, is becoming
increasingly
politicized.
But the attempt to perfect life through
increasingly
comprehensive state intervention, until even the smallest injustices were compensated, was also bound to fail.
After all, the social sciences historically offered empirical support and spiritual hope for just such reforms, which are
increasingly
dismissed as "utopian."
It requires an
increasingly
controversial assumption: all human beings - whatever their achievements, competences, status, or health - are equally significant members of society, whose strength ultimately lies in what they can do together.
For all, a perilous existential moment is
increasingly
close at hand.
It also hinges on their ability to do so in the midst of natural forces that are
increasingly
difficult to control and overcome.
And, in much of the West, states adhere to models of welfare provision that
increasingly
disappoint their citizens and are often unaffordable.
Indeed, some argue that the inventiveness and internationalism of a world networked by interests and shared causes is likely to be more resilient than one crammed into the artificial – and
increasingly
constraining – box of the national state.
Rather than allowing Europe and North America to continue to dominate their economic development, sub-Saharan African countries are
increasingly
pursuing partnerships with their neighbors.
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