Indicated
in sentence
465 examples of Indicated in a sentence
The recent Dodd-Frank financial-reform legislation took away some of the Fed’s powers, and the legislative debate surrounding the bill
indicated
that there could be wide support for further restrictions if Congress becomes unhappy with Fed policy.
And both Xi and Li have
indicated
the government’s willingness to tolerate slower GDP growth in the short term for the sake of building a stronger, more sustainable economy.
But he did not do himself any favors with his cabinet choices, many of whom had mediocre records that
indicated
corruptibility.
But these are not structural deficits, and financial markets would be better informed and reassured if the ECB
indicated
the size of the real structural deficits and showed that they are now declining.
The implication is that the decrease in societal wellbeing may be far larger than that
indicated
by conventional GDP measures – numbers that already are bleak enough, with most countries showing that real (inflation-adjusted) per capita income is lower today than before the crisis – a lost half-decade.
More recently, a report by the Council on Foreign Relations
indicated
that mortality from NCDs for people under 60 is more than three times higher in low-income countries than in high-income countries.
I was pleased to see that a large Chinese energy company, Shanghai Electric, recently
indicated
public support for substantial reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions.
He specifically
indicated
that he would not want to undergo major surgery.
A 2002 study
indicated
that three-quarters of Americans feel connected to their communities, and consider their quality of life to be excellent or good, with nearly half of adults participating in a civic group or activity.
Former Deputy Finance Minister Jin Liqun, whom the government has nominated to be the first president of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, has
indicated
that the AIIB’s successful launch was driven by such ministerial cooperation.
When the authorities
indicated
that they were serious about legalizing Solidarity, I concluded that political negotiations – known as the Roundtable talks – were desirable.
Although recent reports of the International Working Group of sovereign funds have
indicated
the difficulties in applying uniform governance standards, several measures are needed in order to bring Libya back to global capital markets.
A recent GFI study
indicated
that, from 2002 to 2011, $60.8 billion moved illegally into or out of Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Uganda in this way.
Recent state elections
indicated
a popular mood that is suspicious of openness, particularly to refugees, with the National Front’s German counterpart, the Alternative for Germany, making large strides in some regions.
As for priorities, the EU has clearly
indicated
that Structural and Cohesion funds should be used to implement the “EU 2020” strategy, according to which member countries are asked to focus resources on a small number of high-return projects – so-called “thematic concentration.”
After a solid 2017, key macroeconomic data – on unemployment, inflation, and consumer and business sentiment – as well as GDP forecasts all
indicated
that strong growth would continue in 2018.
An almost revolutionary – and very un-British – dynamic has taken hold, and, as British Prime Minister Theresa May
indicated
in her “Little Englander” speech at the Conservative Party conference this month, the UK is heading for a “hard Brexit.”
This would be true even if the UK pursued a prepackaged arrangement such as membership in the European Economic Area or the EU Customs Union; it will be all the more true if the UK seeks a “bespoke” deal, as May has
indicated
she will.
The dynamic that has brought Pakistan-US relations to this point arguably began on December 1, 2009, when President Barack Obama, announcing a surge in the number of US troops in Afghanistan, also
indicated
his intention to start pulling back American troops beginning in July 2011 – a pledge that he reiterated two months ago.
Well into his second year in office, Trump is behaving even worse than his record
indicated
he would, unceremoniously tossing aside advisers and other officials whenever the mood takes him.
Even US President Donald Trump – usually a close friend to Poland’s nationalists –
indicated
that he would not meet with Polish leaders until the crisis was resolved.
And in the run-up to a NATO summit later this year, the US has
indicated
that it will do even more to ensure the territorial integrity of Baltic and Scandinavian member states.
Perhaps, as Asia’s spectacular growth prior to the crisis indicated, this combination may even have contributed to the region’s economic success, at least for a while.
The White House has
indicated
that it is weighing five potential candidates.
That the US welcomed the steps taken so far was
indicated
by the Clinton administration's decision to actually implement its previously announced intention to lift trade sanctions on North Korean exports.
In 2003, for example, roughly 1,800 French Jews moved to Israel, and 20%
indicated
that they might consider moving.
That NATO and the EU may lack the will to change is
indicated
by the fact that, even after Russian troops invaded Crimea and eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region, only part of the West was ready to admit that President Vladimir Putin was intent on restoring Russia as an aggressive global power.
They all thereby
indicated
that democracy is not some kind of natural condition, nor some end-point of history whose stability and permanence can be taken for granted.
While Regling spoke of an emerging “multipolar monetary system,” his remarks clearly
indicated
the functioning of a “tripolar” system.
China has clearly
indicated
its intention of responding to US actions, raising the risk of escalation by an erratic US leader.
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