Medium
in sentence
742 examples of Medium in a sentence
(Indian TV epitomizes the old crack about why television is called a medium: because it is neither rare nor well done.)
There is nothing wrong with either per se, so long as they are sustainable in the
medium
term and viable in the long term.
Over the
medium
term, the budget assumes that ten-year rates will be barely above their three-month counterpart.
In the
medium
term, it might even increase the risk of serious cyber conflict.
But, even in an inclusive political transition, whether in the short or
medium
term, Egyptians will have to answer the vexing question that they have failed for six decades to confront: What is Egypt?
Remarkably, as short-term interest rates rose, medium- and long-term interest rates did not, something that was referred to as a “conundrum.”
Blinkered by the illusion of having snatched whatever influence newspapers commanded, social media’s mavens bungled their attempts to dethrone the older
medium.
In the short to
medium
term, African countries would do well to look into the power of collective bargaining to strike better deals for needed vaccines.
But Bitcoin’s success, which remains highly uncertain, ultimately depends on it attaining sufficient stability to perform the most essential function of any currency (as opposed to a speculative commodity) – that of providing a relatively predictable
medium
of exchange.
A Shi’a government in Baghdad, dominated by Iran, would, in the
medium
term, threaten Saudi Arabia’s territorial integrity – a scenario that the Saudis cannot, and will not, accept.
Meanwhile, job losses in the short to
medium
term can be minimized by focusing cuts in capacity on a relatively small number of large industrial vessels, as opposed to small-scale artisanal fleets.
Could Carstens, the former long-time governor of the Bank of Mexico, find a happy
medium
between the hawks and the doves, between the controlling Chinese and the complaisant Canadians?
Democracies are notoriously bad at producing credible bargains that require political commitments over the
medium
term.
In return, the highly indebted countries must commit to multi-year programs to restructure fiscal institutions and enhance competitiveness – reforms that can be implemented and bear fruit only over the
medium
term.
In the
medium
term, the world abounds with tensions and potential crises that US leadership is likely to be indispensable to resolving.
Many of the countries that are piling on massive quantities of debt to bail out their banks have only tepid
medium
term growth prospects, raising real questions of solvency and sustainabilityItaly, for example with a debt-to-income ratio already exceeding 100%, has been able to manage so far thanks to falling global rates.
Otherwise, pro-growth reforms will lose political legitimacy, enabling destructive nationalist, nativist, and protectionist forces to continue to gain traction and thus to undermine medium- and longer-term growth.
If allowed to continue, Europe’s labor-market crisis will inflict lasting damage on an entire generation, with unforeseeable medium- and long-term effects on employment, productivity, and social cohesion.
Improved competitiveness facilitated by the euro bodes well for Germany’s
medium
term economic prospects.
Unlike the French, however, the Dutch have not been euro bashers even though, as a
medium
sized country, the Netherlands do have some legitimate grievances against the EU—namely, how the so-called “Stability Pact” to control fiscal deficits is being enforced.
In the short and
medium
term, it will be virtually impossible to create enough jobs to meet the needs of the unemployed and vulnerably employed.
But small and
medium
sized enterprises (SMEs) – the majority of firms in both Latin America and Europe – find it difficult to trade and invest at international level, in part because of high transaction and information costs.
This argument, too, is hardly irrelevant: higher inflation today must not be permitted to change inflation expectations in the
medium
run.
For purposes of our report, we define competitiveness in a precise way: as a country’s capacity to achieve sustained economic growth in the
medium
term – ie, five-years time.
A strength and weakness of our analysis of competitiveness is that it focuses on the
medium
term, not the coming year or two.
Later on, the Stability and Growth Pact added a requirement that, over the
medium
term, government accounts should be "close to balance."
As generations pass, monuments evolve from a
medium
of mourning to instruments of education.
But the United Nations climate panel’s latest assessment tells us precisely the opposite: for “North America, there is
medium
confidence that there has been an overall slight tendency toward less dryness (wetting trend with more soil moisture and runoff).”
In addressing its medium- to long-term consequences, a focus on women – especially poor women – is needed.
Zika’s medium- and long-term consequences must be addressed with this in mind.
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