Institutional
in sentence
1761 examples of Institutional in a sentence
Beyond corporate governance, we must restore balance to the profit-investment relationship through
institutional
as well as public-policy initiatives, and with proactive industrial policies.
The reason, the lawsuit claims, is that these men oversaw an
institutional
culture that punished those who reported the assaults, while refusing to punish the attackers.
What becomes clear from story after story in The Invisible War is a consistent – indeed, nearly identical – narrative of concealment, cover-up, and punishment of alleged victims, for whom justice was almost impossible to obtain through
institutional
channels.
Prolonged periods of strain tend to weaken the fabric of
institutional
cooperation.
To that end, in 2015, the World Bank and other MDBs launched a strategy to increase development financing “from billions to trillions,” by using public finance to “crowd in” private investment, especially from large
institutional
investors like pension and insurance funds.
But in this intricate and ever-changing
institutional
universe, we often no longer know who is in control.
But a wholesale structural overhaul of the global economy’s
institutional
architecture is improbable, regardless of the context.
Catholicism – or, more accurately, the celibate male mythos at the heart of the
institutional
church – rests on centuries of sexism.
Economically, the proposal would make an already terrible
institutional
design worse.
This summit should have proposed
institutional
changes to avert such a scenario.
Local-currency bond markets, vertical funds for global public goods, carbon markets, and new mechanisms to attract
institutional
investors and sovereign wealth funds would also help.
But, like closed economies that miss out on the benefits of trade altogether, open economies with significant
institutional
or political obstacles to structural change will underperform.
It must overcome the
institutional
barriers that make it seemingly impossible to forge a common position on external cyber policy.
The Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944, which laid the
institutional
foundation for the post-war World War II economy, was made possible because the United States and Britain called the shots.
In that sense, these incomplete contracts laid the foundation for market-oriented competition in China, before it was possible – owing to
institutional
and ideological barriers – to achieve clearly defined private property rights.
Moreover, the EU’s ability to bring together diverse actors – institutional, national, non-governmental, and corporate – is unmatched by virtually any other entity on the international stage.
In the end, the sociopolitical and
institutional
effects of a crisis can far outlast the economic and financial ones.
The sales made sense at the time for most of the participating countries: The real backing for their debt was the tax reach of their governments, their high levels of
institutional
development, and their relative political stability.
The question, then, is whether the new leaders, as early as next month, succeed in a new effort to adopt the vital
institutional
reforms that the enlarged Union requires.
One of the East Asian economies’ major lessons for developing countries is that economic development leads to
institutional
transformation, not the other way around.
In Taiwan and South Korea, for example, authoritarian governments after World War II compensated for the weakness of the rule of law by creating transitional
institutional
arrangements to facilitate GDP growth.
Away from the rarefied atmosphere of EU summits (which, so far, have been shaping the Union’s response to events in Greece), other
institutional
actors have been – and are – shaping the EU system.
This is attributable largely to public investment in rural infrastructure, and, in the initial period, to
institutional
changes in agrarian production organization and an egalitarian distribution of land-cultivation rights.
A more plausible explanation is that
institutional
differences in the ability to borrow dictate to some extent the disparity in savings rates across countries.
The good news here is that Ghani’s government has already recognized the problems presented by patronage, corruption, and
institutional
weakness, and has promised to tackle them.
Combine this with a burgeoning
institutional
infrastructure for private property rights, and an improved standard of living cannot be long in coming.
Now that Europe’s current crisis has convinced many that existing
institutional
arrangements are unsustainable, this may be about to change.
Indeed, in a recent report, they call for progress toward a “deep, genuine, and fair” EMU; economic, financial, and fiscal union; and a political union that provides the foundation for the rest “through genuine democratic accountability, legitimacy, and
institutional
strengthening.”
Within the existing
institutional
framework, political responsibility for higher transfer payments among countries must remain with the national governments, controlled by national parliaments and electorates.
In other words, the EMU will remain an
institutional
arrangement among individual countries that retain their fiscal sovereignty.
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