Mutual
in sentence
836 examples of Mutual in a sentence
Eric Zitzewitz of Stanford University estimates that market timing has cost US
mutual
fund investors about $5 billion a year--less than 0.1% of the $7 trillion
mutual
fund assets.
(Some media accounts have made Zitzewitz's estimates appear much larger by taking them as a percent of the most vulnerable
mutual
funds' assets, rather than of all
mutual
funds assets.)
However, in the case of Kashmir, the asymmetric conflict currently fought by proxies and terrorist groups might not degenerate into all-out war precisely because India and Pakistan have
mutual
nuclear deterrence.Indeed, such asymmetric conflicts through proxies have become the new conventional way that states avoid the price of a general war.
What is needed is a process that rebuilds trust and communication so that the give-and-take of negotiation is perceived as serving
mutual
interests rather than serving up insults to national dignity or identity.
Distrust will continue, signals will be confused, setbacks will be frequent, but the results could well lead over time to greater
mutual
understanding and a learned capacity to work on some of the most pressing problems, just as the US learned to do with the Soviet Union and China.
Visiting Moscow that month, our NATO expert group sought to promote a re-thinking of
mutual
perceptions.
The main problem in the NATO-Russia relationship is not a lack of institutions, documents, or procedures, but a lack of transparency, confidence, and
mutual
trust.
It endorses policies that capture accurately the relationship between “out of area operations” and members’ commitment to their
mutual
self-defense under Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty.
It further rightly suggests that NATO’s strategic political and military objectives could be achieved jointly with Russia through greater stability,
mutual
transparency, predictability, and arms reduction verified by non-proliferation and arms control agreements.
Hong Kong ’s government, led by the HKMA, launched an unprecedented intervention, buying up local shares to “defeat” the speculators, but failed to stop the stampede by global investors, including conservative pension and
mutual
funds.
If these two countries’
mutual
hostility is not reined in, and a fundamentalist Afghanistan continues to provide the strategic depth through which Pakistan threatens its sworn Indian enemies, the current disaster might still breed defeat.
These are occasions for
mutual
flattery and strutting in front of the cameras.
More broadly, keeping military expansion in check, enlarging the number of countries that conclude the Arms Trade Treaty, and improving
mutual
understanding among national defense authorities are now the paramount issues facing Asia.
An end to civilian casualties could also help to create an atmosphere in which all sides begin to develop the
mutual
confidence essential to taking the next step – talking to each other to find a way to end the conflict – an outcome that is both necessary and possible.
And, working at an official level, it means co-sponsoring with Brazil the Open Government Partnership, which brings together governments committed to increasing transparency, accountability, and citizen participation, and uses
mutual
peer pressure and open reporting to hold them to their commitments.
Asia’s two giants have long defined their relationship in terms of the famous Pancha Sheela:
mutual
respect for each other’s territorial integrity and sovereignty;
mutual
non-aggression;
mutual
non-interference in each other’s internal affairs; equality and
mutual
benefit; and peaceful co-existence.
The updated principles would maintain strategic communication and healthy bilateral relations; harness each other’s strengths and expand cooperation in infrastructure, investment, and other areas; deepen cultural ties and increase
mutual
understanding and friendship; expand coordination and collaboration in multilateral affairs to safeguard developing countries’ legitimate interests and address global challenges; and accommodate each other’s core concerns and reconcile bilateral disagreements amicably.
Knowing that such a move would provoke an enormous backlash domestically, we looked for a formula for continuing official contacts and arms sales with Taiwan even after we had de-recognized them and terminated the
mutual
security treaty ratified during the Eisenhower years.
Israel and the Palestinians have been negotiating since 1995, when they signed the Oslo Accords whose major achievement was
mutual
recognition and autonomy in areas of the West Bank and Gaza for the Palestinians.
Joint efforts to combat drug trafficking in Afghanistan, for example, could help dilute the
mutual
antagonism and distrust that contribute to blockage on the nuclear front.
More recently, the eurozone has begun to create a system of
mutual
insurance among member states.
If those agreements have widespread acceptance and
mutual
consistency, the result will be a stable international monetary system.
They are contained in three concepts: freedom, solidarity, and
mutual
respect.
The Merkel document puts forward two ideas here:
mutual
recognition of qualifications, which would promote labor mobility, and – with no concern for the sanctity of tax sovereignty – harmonization of corporate-tax bases in order to encourage capital mobility.
But such a world requires that
mutual
respect replace
mutual
suspicion.
Instead of serving as a source of stability, as it did in the past, this
mutual
dependence is driving Russia toward political and economic isolation – with serious consequences for ordinary Russians’ livelihoods.
Societies long oriented to economic dynamism tend to welcome the economically successful, viewing them as a source of
mutual
gains.
And solidarity within NATO – a term all but shunned these days in official German circles – is mutual: left to its own devices, Germany could one day wake up in a very precarious situation.
For its part, the government should open a dialogue with them, characterized by
mutual
respect and transparency.
And political leaders should encourage social integration and
mutual
understanding.This is how we can pay tribute to the victims of the Holocaust – not only to lament the dead, but also to empower the living.
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