Large
in sentence
10236 examples of Large in a sentence
The principle even applies to foods:
Large
amounts of nutmeg or licorice are notoriously toxic.
Inconvenient Truths About MigrationLONDON – Sociology, anthropology, and history have been making
large
inroads into the debate on immigration.
Reallocation of China’s
large
foreign-exchange assets away from low-yield US Treasury bonds to higher-yield infrastructure investment makes sense, and creates alternative markets for Chinese goods.
Especially in the United Kingdom and France, unemployment and a perceived lack of control over borders have played a
large
role in fostering disaffection with the EU.
The EU does not have a significant budget, and it sets at most a general framework for economic and social rules that vary widely across a
large
and diverse continent.
That is an unimaginably
large
burden, and it risks condemning Greece to permanent recession and social unrest.
A possible counterargument is that Greece has a
large
informal economy, so its actual GDP is larger than the official figure.
The conclusion is clear: Greece’s debt-service burden is too large, and it must be reduced.
Even with German-level interest rates, Greece would have to run a primary surplus of at least 2% of GDP – still quite large, and far from today’s deficit.
The required cut is large: eliminating half of Greece’s public debt obligation would leave it at nearly 80% of GDP, a ratio higher than Spain’s.
But the ad hominem attacks on Rajan in recent months raise
large
questions with serious implications for India.
To fight evil, we must reject exclusion and hate, and we must not blacken the reputation of a
large
segment of our society.
But how
large
must such a stimulus be?
The good news is that some countries have
large
savings that they want to invest in other countries, and are not put off by short-run market gyrations.
There are
large
current-account surpluses among emerging markets (a big change from 1997, when most emerging markets had deficits).
Indeed, several
large
oil exporters and Asian manufacturing exporters will have sizable surpluses for as long as we can forecast.
But is everyone really ready to receive such
large
amounts of capital and to carefully manage its macroeconomic impact?
Indeed, the US tax code is riddled with special preferences and contains
large
differences in effective tax rates across individuals and economic activities.
Because tax expenditures are so large, limiting them could raise a significant amount of additional revenue that could be used both for deficit reduction and to finance across-the-board cuts in income-tax rates.
Reducing
large
regressive tax expenditures like preferential tax rates for capital gains and dividends and deductions for state and local taxes, and replacing deductions with progressive tax credits, could generate enough revenue to finance rate cuts for all taxpayers, increase the tax code’s overall progressivity, and contribute meaningfully to deficit reduction.
If, like Japan in the late 1990’s and the US in 1937, they take the threat of
large
deficits seriously and raise taxes and cut spending too much too soon, their economies could fall back into recession.
Once everyone gets the message that secrecy carries unacceptably
large
risks, they will act in ways that minimize those risks.
While all other
large
European countries abolished military conscription in recent decades, Russia continues with a system in which all physically-fit male citizens aged 18 to 27 must serve for 12 months.
In other words, conscription operates as a
large
in-kind tax on the poorest households, thereby sustaining and increasing Russia’s already high inequality.
Whereas Obama owes his election in
large
part to his charisma, Barroso is likely to succeed himself precisely because of his lack of charisma, because he says very little in so many languages.
Indeed, these countries are already experiencing
large
relative price increases for food and oil, a food emergency for the poor, and higher rates of inflation induced by commodity price shifts.
Absent the willingness of
large
developing countries to run trade surpluses and high savings rates relative to investment, the asset bubble in the US – leading to a rise in domestic consumption and a fall in the savings rate – would have triggered inflation and higher interest rates.
State-owned commercial banks account for half the financial system; all
large
companies are State monopolies, bureaucratically staffed and poorly managed.
A populist, twice president, he frowned on foreign investment, favored small firms, wanted
large
ones nationalized, and disparaged entrepreneurship.
In this wider and uncertain context, the need to regulate humanitarian military intervention looms
large.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
Countries
Would
There
Small
Could
Other
Number
People
Financial
About
World
Country
Economic
While
Banks
Growth
Economy
Deficits