Manage
in sentence
2173 examples of Manage in a sentence
One general asked me, off the record, “How did you
manage
to implement such dramatic political changes without bloodshed?”
Since late summer, the United States Federal Reserve has been attempting to
manage
the slow-moving financial crisis triggered by the collapse of America’s housing bubble.
Having decided to leave the EU, it is in the UK’s interest to
manage
withdrawal in a way that minimizes short-term adjustment costs and long-term adverse effects.
They claim to
manage
conflicts of interest; but we see that they may
manage
them for their own interests.
Although the Conservatives did
manage
a narrow victory in the next election, the party’s internal fissure over European integration deepened, and by the end of the 1990s, Labour was back in power (and would remain there for more than a decade).
Both candidates are United States senators with little experience as executives, so their ability to
manage
the crisis has become a central issue in the election.
For example, I know a brilliant chief technology officer who started a company that never gained traction because he simply couldn’t
manage
it.
More, not less, cooperation is necessary to
manage
growing complexity and integration.
The eurozone was too integrated for cross-border spillovers not to cause mayhem in national economies, but not integrated enough to have the institutional capacity needed to
manage
the crisis.
India’s private sector is efficient and entrepreneurial, and its capital and management skills have proven able to control and
manage
assets in the sophisticated financial markets of the developed West.
For its part, the World Bank is investing in programs that promote good governance worldwide, while maintaining a robust investigation, enforcement, and prevention capacity to
manage
risks and root out shady practices.
First, they were to
manage
the state’s credit, almost inevitably in the wake of costly major wars.
In the mid-nineteenth century, a new generation of central banks was established essentially to
manage
payments systems and stabilize fragile banking systems.
Of course, developed-country institutional investors do
manage
a lot of the world’s investable cash – almost $95 trillion in 2011, according to the OECD.
Thus far, the government has demonstrated some flexibility while trying to
manage
this new challenge with traditional means.
But policymakers’ job is to
manage
risks, and those they are facing today are not the usual ones.
And even if they
manage
this eventually, will Germany have lost much of Europe in the meantime?
Altering the course of a giant ship – in this case, the US economy – takes a long time, and even if Trump ever does
manage
to get some of his economic agenda through the US Congress, the growth effects are not likely to be felt until well into 2018.
If the monarchy consults them and begins to
manage
expectations properly, reconciliation and stability remain possible.
The orderly rewinding that is now needed will be very difficult to
manage.
Indeed, for the future, it is imperative to think about many new ways, involving both government and the market, to ensure that we
manage
better the greatest personal risks now faced by workers around the world.
Researchers there argue that in fragile speculative industries (and finance has certainly been in that category in recent years) it is hard for investors to monitor those who
manage
their money.
By their nature, e-commerce and technology-based businesses offer women more flexibility and autonomy, helping them to
manage
home responsibilities alongside paid work.
Yet she also pointed to “significant areas of common interest,” arguing that, “if we want to address, manage, or solve some of the most pressing issues of the twenty-first century, India, China, and the US will have to coordinate our…efforts.”
In Paris, CEOs from various industries – ranging from cement to technology companies – made clear pledges to decrease carbon footprints, invest in renewables, and
manage
resources sustainably.
Moreover, they doubt local governments’ ability to
manage
their budgets properly and to use the additional tax revenues efficiently.
But even if American elites do
manage
to wrest back control, the deeper source of Western angst will remain.
In May 2010, financial markets lost confidence in the ability of Greece to
manage
its budget deficit and to repay its debt.
Republican lawmakers are discussing how to bind the Fed to more scripted policy rules to
manage
inflation (using a formula known as the Taylor rule, which predetermines changes in the federal funds rate in relation to inflation and an output gap).
Governance, institution building, security, and agreeing on an international presence are daunting challenges, but probably the most worrisome aspect of post-Qaddafi Libya will be the view among Western experts that experience in Iraq and Afghanistan has given them the knowledge and the skill sets to
manage
all these operations.
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