Infrastructure
in sentence
4036 examples of Infrastructure in a sentence
The NEPAD Heads of States Implementing Committee has asked the African Development Bank to take the lead in regional
infrastructure
(including transport, energy, water, etc.) and banking and financial standards.
As part of the work on regional infrastructure, the Bank has developed a short-term action plan.
In the financial sector, the banking system must be commercialized, thereby gradually allowing interest rates to be set by market forces, while capital markets must be deepened in tandem with the development of the legal and supervisory
infrastructure
needed to ensure financial stability.
It is widely assumed that monetary policy is a spent force in the US and Europe, and that fiscal stimulus and expansion – for example, via tax cuts and
infrastructure
spending – must take over.
Information technology is already revolutionizing the delivery of health care, education, governance,
infrastructure
(for example, prepaid electricity), banking, emergency response, and much more.
Alarmingly high youth unemployment, shrinking social safety nets, and under-investment in
infrastructure
and human capital are burdening current generations and, in a growing number of cases, will adversely affect future generations as well.
India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Act is assisting to repair and restore a range of rural infrastructure, critical for the livelihoods of the poor, including water-storage networks in some of the poorest parts of the country, such as Andhra Pradesh.
The African Development Bank also has a role to play, particularly in
infrastructure
development.
By promoting regional integration, improved
infrastructure
can enhance trade and support skills development.
This is particularly true in the advanced economies, where depleted financial reserves and political paralysis are preventing constructive investments in areas like
infrastructure
and education, which can enable citizens to take advantage of globalization’s benefits.
Meanwhile, the slow-growing sectors risk falling into a “balance-sheet recession," with highly indebted SOEs and local governments becoming so focused on paying down their debts that they stop investing in needed infrastructure, even when interest rates fall.
Why Tax Cuts for the Rich Solve NothingNEW YORK – Although America’s right-wing plutocrats may disagree about how to rank the country’s major problems – for example, inequality, slow growth, low productivity, opioid addiction, poor schools, and deteriorating
infrastructure
– the solution is always the same: lower taxes and deregulation, to “incentivize” investors and “free up” the economy.
In rural constituencies, opposition candidates defeated such EPRDF heavyweights as the ministers of defense, information, and infrastructure, along with the presidents of the two largest regions, Oromia and Amhara.
The paper urges all countries to align real wage growth with productivity gains, get rid of automatic indexation of wages (long gone in France but still alive in Belgium), and commit to a minimum rate of investment in research and development, education, and
infrastructure.
And his
infrastructure
spending plans – based on investment tax credits – may have only limited impact.
Why the EU has not become more engaged in the Western Balkans – a region where it can make all the difference by supporting economic and administrative modernization and
infrastructure
projects to link the region to the Union’s industrial centers – remains the secret of the European Commission and the member states.
Urged by advisers to extricate himself from his lonely position on Russia’s meddling, Trump stated after the briefing that he has “tremendous respect” for the work of the intelligence agencies and acknowledged that Russia – but also other countries, he added, such as China – continually try to attack America’s cyber
infrastructure.
They need to invest considerable time and money in training scientists and engineers, establishing genuinely independent, well-funded regulators, and putting in place the necessary technical
infrastructure.
There were massive transfers, and national resources were devoted to gigantic
infrastructure
projects.
What is not on the decline, though, is our exposure to risk and the high price that we pay in terms of lost jobs, destroyed or damaged homes, and disruption to education, health services, and transport
infrastructure.
The most visible is the structural approach, which invests money wisely in flood protection, drainage, preservation of wetlands and forests, and remedial action – based on sound risk assessment – to protect valuable
infrastructure.
In his speech, Trump promised to be a president for all Americans, praised Clinton for her past public service, and vowed to pursue massive fiscal-stimulus policies centered on
infrastructure
spending and tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy.
For example, between 1990 and 2015, average life expectancy increased, infant mortality rates were halved, secondary school enrollment soared, and
infrastructure
gaps narrowed.
Africa’s increasing public-debt burden means higher interest costs, which divert resources from education, health care, and
infrastructure.
Additionally, most countries that have funded development and
infrastructure
through borrowing have failed to generate sufficient additional tax revenues to repay that debt.
After all, many of the advanced-country banks, especially in Europe, that dominated such investment – for example, financing large-scale
infrastructure
projects – are undergoing deep deleveraging and rebuilding their capital buffers.
Most important among these challenges are health education, infrastructure, and distribution networks.
That is why we have forged a partnership with the Zambian government to scale up a countrywide system of pharmacies in order to bring basic medicines to remote villages, and to build the country’s health-care
infrastructure.
They strengthen local infrastructure, improve education, create jobs, and drive economic growth.
Likewise, the US needs the cooperation of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand to host its critical radar
infrastructure.
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