Institutions
in sentence
6844 examples of Institutions in a sentence
Indeed, a major problem with the current state of affairs is the weakness of EU
institutions
that are in charge of advancing the common interest and that are accountable to Europeans as a whole.
America's reluctance – and that of France, Germany, and Italy – to give the emerging powers an appropriate voice in the established international financial
institutions
is counterproductive.
It drives the creation of new parallel
institutions
such as the AIIB and the New Development Bank, founded in 2014 by the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa).
Otherwise, it would risk accelerating the decline of the established international financial
institutions.
Since the 1970s, economists have been advising policymakers to de-emphasize the public sector, physical capital, and infrastructure, and to prioritize private markets, human capital (skills and training), and reforms in governance and
institutions.
Second, weaker potential growth – the counterpart to lower equilibrium interest rates – has created fertile ground for populism in countries lacking robust
institutions.
While complaints against parents, based on allegedly repressed and recovered memories of abuse, have declined, those against large institutions, such as the Catholic Church, have increased.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF), for example, pushes widespread improvement in laws related to corporate and financial
institutions.
The IMF endorsed legal standards and codes of best practice developed by other institutions, but also promotes the development of new standards, including accounting and auditing standards, securities market regulations, bankruptcy law, codes for corporate governance, insurance and banking regulations.
Moreover, the process by which a law is developed has consequences for the effectiveness of legal
institutions.
Countries that developed their formal legal order internally develop more effective legal
institutions
than those who rely - or were forced to rely - on legal transplants.
Countries that actively select legal norms from elsewhere, adapting them to local conditions, are on a par with countries that develop their legal order internally when it comes to the effectiveness of legal
institutions.
Perhaps the effectiveness of legal
institutions
in developing countries and emerging markets is not the only goal.
Investors need to take account of the effectiveness of domestic legal institutions, not just the laws on the books.
This will provide recipient countries a clearer understanding of the context in which these
institutions
operate and the complexity of the tasks ahead.
It may also avoid transplanting solutions that simply won’t work absent complementary domestic legal rules and
institutions.
There can be no “phased implementation” of a trade deal that has not been finalized, so UK-based car companies, financial institutions, and other businesses that export to the EU now should start preparing for the “cliff edge” that May wants to avoid.
Frank Gaffney, an influential figure in Trump’s ethnic nationalist circles, spoke of Muslims as “termites,” who “hollow out the structure of the civil society and other institutions.”
Judaism was seen not as a spiritual faith, but as a political culture, which was by definition incompatible with Western civilization and its
institutions.
Sixth, while regulatory reform that increases the liquidity and capital ratios for financial
institutions
is necessary, those higher ratios should be phased in gradually to prevent a further worsening of the credit crunch.
Finally, the International Monetary Fund, the European Union, and other multilateral
institutions
should provide generous lender-of-last-resort support in order to prevent a severe deflationary recession in countries that need private and public deleveraging.
In general, deleveraging by households, governments, and financial
institutions
should be gradual – and supported by currency weakening – if we are to avoid a double-dip recession and a worsening of deflation.
Moreover, young small countries must recognize that building the
institutions
and economies to which they aspire will take time.
Add to that measures like the quality of institutions, suitability to thrive in a globalized world, stability of economic output, and level of human development, and one can generate a country strength index, in which 13 of the top 20 performers are small, with the most successful being Switzerland, Singapore, Denmark, Ireland, and Norway.
Specifically, small developing countries should focus on building institutions, such as central banks and finance ministries, that explicitly seek to minimize the macroeconomic volatility associated with globalization.
Thus,
institutions
are rendered more democratic and governments become more transparent and responsible.
Countries must create
institutions
to ensure that support is given – and withdrawn – only with expected productivity in mind, not as a way to reward friends or political allies.
That crisis is located in Mexico, which is in freefall, its state
institutions
under threat as they have not been since at least the Cristero Uprising of the late 1920’s and possibly since the Mexican Revolution of 1910.
Their ideas would feed into a broader process involving the EU
institutions
and governments that want to overhaul Europe.
Others (think Cyprus, Iceland, Ireland, the UK, and the US) resorted to unsustainable surges in leverage among financial
institutions
to fund private-sector activities, sometimes almost irrespective of underlying fundamentals.
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