Managing
in sentence
993 examples of Managing in a sentence
Another is that the IMF is a predominantly European institution, with a European
managing
director, a heavily European staff, and a European culture.
Managing
mixed economies that include state-owned enterprises and an inchoate private sector will require discipline, so that productive assets are not squandered, or privatized at fire-sale prices.
As Christine Lagarde, the Fund’s
managing
director, put it in a speech in December, “The sun is shining through the clouds and helping most economies generate the strongest growth since the financial crisis.”
The Executive Board could approve an analogous commitment and request the IMF’s
managing
director to refrain from submitting any draft decision requiring an 85% majority without first obtaining US support.
This has prompted many – including People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan; the United Nations-backed Stiglitz Commission; the Palais-Royal Initiative, led by former IMF
Managing
Director Michel Camdessus; and the Triffin International Foundation – to call for changes to the international monetary system.
Given the mismatch of member states’ policy (topple Qaddafi) and a strategy to “protect civilians” based on a contested United Nations Security Council resolution, NATO can certainly take pride in
managing
a great challenge and strengthening its role as the preeminent Euro-Atlantic institution.
Migration challenges remain, and reform of the EU’s methods for
managing
immigration is desperately needed, as the recent scandalous treatment of the Aquarius rescue vessel, which Italy and Malta turned away, made all too clear.
The agency charged with
managing
state property (Rosimushchestvo) is unable to act as an effective controlling shareholder.
Xi and Wang are seasoned politicians with extensive experience dealing with crises and
managing
complex institutional and social challenges, from the local to the global level.
And yet for decades we thought that the people who were
managing
those firms were much smarter than we were.
Moreover, it is not clear that the EIB can get further help from reinsurers in
managing
the risks it assumes by issuing such bonds because reinsurers do not yet see how they can fully hedge the risks involved.
Unfortunately, when it comes to
managing
technological revolutions, humanity has a rather poor track record.
That is why multilateral institutions need to be upgraded and restructured, with effective decision-making and implementation mechanisms for
managing
global development challenges such as infrastructure gaps, migration, climate change, and financial instability.
The underlying problem, though, is that both regulators and bankers continue to rely on mathematical models that promise more than they can deliver for
managing
financial risks.
To that end, we should follow the advice of David Lipton, the IMF’s first deputy
managing
director, and move beyond the fashionable “OHIO” approach, focused on getting one’s “own house in order,” to the more demanding California – or “CA” – strategy of “collective action.”
And, of course, there are more mundane but crucial uses of artificial intelligence everywhere, from
managing
the electronics and lighting in our homes to populating “smart grids” for water and electricity, helping monitor these and other systems to reduce waste.
China’s motivations in
managing
North Korea are complex.
Together, they constitute an important intellectual movement, which also happens to be a large part of the reason that American conservatism today has little that is constructive to say about
managing
the economy – and little purchase on the center of the American electorate.
Still, proposals to de-escalate military tensions – perhaps accompanied by a peace treaty and a broader framework for
managing
relations in the region – represented a welcome development, especially in the eyes of the South Koreans and the Chinese.
In lieu of Erhard's so-called ordoliberalism – in which the state lays the groundwork for a functioning market economy by actively
managing
the legal environment – the economic strategy pursued by Chancellor Angela Merkel's government has been haphazard, driven more by political expediency than by any underlying philosophy.
Managing
a growing and increasingly complex set of transnational connections is an even bigger challenge in a multi-speed world that is being turned upside down.
Indeed, with the ratio of royals to commoners now at one to a thousand (compared to one to five million in the United Kingdom), the challenge of
managing
princely privileges, salaries, and demand for jobs has never been more intense.
If the British economy is to cope with Brexit as well as it has coped with the Brexit vote, the government, like businesses, must minimize the impact of uncertainty by
managing
that uncertainty effectively.
Harry Truman was a modest orator, but compensated for the lack of public rhetoric by attracting and ably
managing
a stellar set of advisers.
To escape the crisis, EU leaders must recognize the shortcomings of the eurozone’s one-dimensional framework, and develop a system better suited to
managing
a multi-faceted monetary union.
Building health-care systems that are capable of
managing
infectious diseases, while also providing quality cancer care, requires a significant investment in time, money, and expertise.
In 2002, China and ASEAN agreed on a legally non-binding code of conduct for
managing
such disputes, but, as a large power, China believes that it will gain more in bilateral rather than multilateral negotiations with small countries.
So, targeting quantitative objectives can be a useful innovation, but only as long as its purpose is to provide a new tool in
managing
certain aspects of the state’s performance.
Managing
a construction project is rarely simple.
Managing
Syria’s MeltdownDENVER – As Russian and American diplomats prepare for a Syrian peace conference, the Middle East is experiencing convulsions not seen since the Arab Spring two years ago.
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