Keeping
in sentence
1800 examples of Keeping in a sentence
In
keeping
with its commitment to the 2º C cap on the rise in global temperature, CELAC not only supports a legally binding agreement, but also calls for wealthy countries to meet their promises to provide developing countries with $100 billion per year in climate finance by 2020.
Motivated by the prospect of a handsome reward, Harrison worked for decades to create the marine chronometer, a timepiece capable of
keeping
accurate time at sea over the course of a long voyage, enabling sea captains to plot their course accurately.
The irony nowadays, however, is that that "bright future" is not to be found by
keeping
the West at bay (the role the Tsar almost always played) but by moving the country toward the West and its values.
None of this bodes well for Europe’s commitment to
keeping
the UK in the Union.
That said, Putin is
keeping
his options open to join the national plutocrats, in case their position dramatically strengthens.
As Sovereign GDP-Linked Bonds points out, inflation-indexed debt is even more vulnerable to government cheating, because the monetary incentive for the government is to underreport inflation, which is in line with
keeping
up appearances.
Particularly in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, cultural norms and economic hardships stop parents from sending their daughters to school or from
keeping
them in school for as long as they enroll their sons.
US President Donald Trump’s recently announced import tariffs on steel, aluminum, and other Chinese-made goods are in
keeping
with his brand of economic nationalism.
So the results strongly suggest that if all Americans were given a chance to vote on
keeping
pregnant pigs and calves in such tight confinement, the majority would vote no.
They all have a right to be equipped for survival, and they all have a right to contribute to
keeping
their communities safe from harm.
It is easier to get carried away when not much is
keeping
you anchored.
Keeping
corruption at the top of political and business leaders’ agenda and ensuring that societies remain vigilant will require strong and sustained effort from actors at all levels – from international institutions to governments, businesses, and ordinary citizens.
But these unconventional policies are turning out to be a classic game-theoretic bad equilibrium: each central bank stands to gain by
keeping
interest rates low, but, collectively, their approach constitutes a trap.
At the end of a fixed period of time – say, five years, as India’s MPs are currently accorded – the public would be able to judge their leader’s success at improving citizens’ lives, rather than at
keeping
a government in office.
Keeping
prices roughly constant was a very different mission from the historical role of central banks.
In terms of institutional design, it is thus optimal for the central bank to maintain a strong commitment to
keeping
inflation low in normal times and to be willing to intervene in a crisis.
Our brains regulate routine activities,
keeping
the leg- and finger-work on track.
Ordinary Libyans have also advocated
keeping
women on a short leash.
The EU could even play a part in
keeping
the 2012 European Championship football finals on track.
Romney, by contrast, favors limiting overall federal spending, currently 24% of GDP, to 20%, and
keeping
defense at 4%.
Yet, despite these circumstances, one political party wants to gut tax revenues altogether, and the other is easily dragged along, against its better instincts, out of concern for
keeping
its rich contributors happy.
On the contrary, Clinton reiterated an earlier warning to Pakistan against
keeping
“snakes in the backyard.”
In any case, the Chinese have a trade-weighted exchange-rate policy, not one based on
keeping
the renminbi at some targeted level relative to the dollar.
Keeping
SDRs as pure “central-bank money” would eliminate such opposition, enabling them to complement and stabilize the current system, rather than upend it.
Since 2010, I have been emphasizing the key role played by policy in
keeping
rates low in a post-crisis era characterized by large overhangs of public and private debt in the advanced economies and a tendency toward deflation.
The policy mix has combined a “whatever it takes” approach to
keeping
policy interest rates low (and sometimes negative) with a heavier dose of financial regulation.
This discourages people from seeking higher incomes in the cities, while
keeping
rural labor productivity and wages low.
A whole range of patriarchal laws and institutions tell us what to do in the guise of
keeping
us ‘safe.’”
As the major central banks talk up monetary-policy normalization, the threats of capital flight and currency depreciation are
keeping
these countries’ policymakers up at night.
These developments in Germany are in
keeping
with trends across Europe, where nationalist and populist parties have made electoral gains by rejecting EU-level solutions and calling for closed borders.
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