Internal
in sentence
1858 examples of Internal in a sentence
Yet, from one government to the next, the result will be massively uneven – a recurring problem during Europe’s multi-decade drive for
internal
currency stability.
Given
internal
conflict over taxes and spending, maybe Germany, not Greece, will become the euro zone’s first country to see a government fall.
Germany increasingly recognizes that if the adjustment needed to restore growth, competitiveness, and debt sustainability in the eurozone’s periphery comes through austerity and
internal
devaluation rather than debt restructuring and exit (leading to the reintroduction of sharply depreciated national currencies), the cost will most likely be trillions of euros.
Just consider what must be overcome: economic divergence and deepening recessions; irreversible balkanization of the banking system and financial markets; unsustainable debt burdens for public and private agents; daunting growth and balance-sheet costs in countries that pursue
internal
devaluation and deflation to restore competitiveness; asymmetrical adjustment, with moral-hazard risks in the core and insufficient financing in the periphery fueling incompatible political dynamics; fickle and impatient markets and investors; austerity fatigue in the periphery and bailout fatigue in the core; the absence of conditions for an optimal currency area; and serious difficulties in achieving full fiscal, banking, economic, and political union.
In economic matters, disagreements on, say, a single EU regulation should not be allowed to mask the fact that no member state, new or old, has ever contested the
internal
market.
For all of its
internal
tribulations, there is no doubt that Egypt is a coherent entity, deeply anchored in history and in the consciousness of its population.
These actions violated the IDB’s own charter, which strictly prohibits the Bank and its members from interfering in the
internal
political affairs of member states.
Latin America’s engagement in global power politics was comparatively limited, and its leaders treated economic development as an
internal
matter.
The truth is, that China's real interests are undermined by the firing of missiles off the coast of Taiwan, threatening Hong Kong's elected Legislative Council with dissolution in 1997, thwarting the Dalai Lama by countermanding his selection of the Panchen Lama's reincarnation, selling ballistic missiles to Pakistan and nuclear technology to Iran, saber rattling over the Spratly Islands, or accusing the U.S. of "interfering in China's
internal
affairs" when it calls attention to trade and human rights abuses.
For example, as China’s median age rises from 34.5 today to 42.5 by 2030, its one-child policy and high rate of
internal
migration will present unique challenges.
But some depreciation of the euro would provide a bridge to reach
internal
governance reform.
In its first years, Al Jazeera was simultaneously hailed as a pioneering media outlet for reform in the Arab world and as an instigator of
internal
conflict and strife.
And the Chinese economy faces serious obstacles to sustainable rapid growth, owing to inefficient state-owned enterprises, growing inequality, massive
internal
migration, an inadequate social safety net, corruption, and inadequate institutions, all of which could foster political instability.
Even if China suffers no major domestic political setback, many current projections based on GDP growth alone are too one-dimensional: they ignore US military and soft-power advantages, as well as China’s geopolitical disadvantages in the
internal
Asian balance of power.
Beyond protests, another way to improve democratic resilience is to equip political institutions with
internal
safeguards.
With strong majorities in both houses, he should be able to secure whatever reform legislation he needs – that is, provided that he can maintain the LDP’s
internal
discipline (his enormous popularity will help him).
Romania's security problems are not external, but internal, for the enemies of Romania establishing a stable, democratic-liberal government are the Romanian people themselves.
Peripheral countries must undertake structural reforms, while recognizing that such changes will not bear fruit overnight, and that
internal
economic rebalancing will be painful.
Yet three
internal
fault lines are making it difficult for the EU to achieve these ends.
The only significant demand expressed by Prime Minister David Cameron in his recent letter to the EU concerns
internal
migration.
External pressures reveal
internal
weaknesses.
With their neighbors embroiled in
internal
conflict or in the midst of difficult transitions, and with discontent rising at home, the Gulf states are eager to stem the tide of revolution.
Deaton argues that aid providers must be extremely careful not to interfere with political and social forces that, over time, can generate organic – and therefore more lasting –
internal
change.
The fact that people in several African countries appear to be worse off now than in 1960 is far more related to despotism and
internal
conflict than it is to the effectiveness of aid-delivery programs.
The inability to achieve a consensus on acute issues, such as Syria’s
internal
repression, or on chronic problems, like climate change, highlights the (increasing) complexity of global governance and responsibility.
Equally worrying are reports that the investigation has been plagued by shoddy police work, including a failure to question key witnesses, check surveillance camera footage, or adequately explain the presence of a former
internal
security officer at the scene the night before the murder.
There is an important lesson in this for the EU at a time when it is seeking to become a global actor: we must reach an
internal
consensus while always bearing in mind what the external ramifications of our decision might be.
To recover and return to both
internal
and external balance, they must not only close the cost gap, but actually reverse it, thereby generating the trade surpluses needed to repay the foreign debt that they accumulated in the meantime.
The result is that the process of
internal
devaluation, as economists call it, is occurring very slowly.
But with India’s vast
internal
market, many designers have an incentive to improve it.
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