Owing
in sentence
2608 examples of Owing in a sentence
But Trump’s popularity has since plummeted,
owing
to his statements – often via Twitter – on contentious issues, such as Taiwan and the South China Sea.
Owing
to fossil-fuel emissions, there is now one-third more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than at any time in at least a million years, as the latest ice drilling in Antarctica has revealed.
Extreme rainfall events will also become more frequent and intense in a warmer climate,
owing
to another simple fact of physics: warm air can hold more moisture.
Owing
to the long-term decline in oil prices and the need to provide education and employment to a fast-growing young population – who might otherwise turn to extremism – King Salman and MBS have apparently concluded that the country needs to modernize.
The pharmaceutical industry has been another,
owing
to special tax breaks such as the “patent box” and the NHS as a huge customer.
So far, however, institutional investors have invested relatively little in infrastructure, partly
owing
to shortcomings in the overall investment environment.
And only three trials—all conducted in Europe—used sham acupuncture as a control, whereas no acupuncture trials controlled with placebos or sham acupuncture have been reported in China,
owing
to high cultural barriers.
Kennan argued that long-term peace between the capitalist West and communist Russia was impossible,
owing
to the mixture of traditional Russian insecurity, Stalin’s need for an external enemy, and communist messianism.
Antitrust policy started in the US at the end of the nineteenth century with a deep suspicion about large firms,
owing
to the concentration of power that largeness entails.
These risks include the negative supply shock that could come from a trade war; higher oil prices,
owing
to politically motivated supply constraints; and inflationary domestic policies in the US.
By then, and with protectionism rising, frothy global markets will probably have become even bumpier,
owing
to the serious risk of a growth stall – or even a downturn – in 2020.
Over-tightening of domestic macroeconomic policies, especially those aimed at the real-estate market, could heighten the risk of a slowdown, with house prices currently falling across China,
owing
to stringent government measures.
But the much larger, longer-run effect comes from increased oil exploration and extraction,
owing
to the incentive of higher prices.
The risk they face is clear enough: absent a profound reengineering, inertial spending –
owing
to entitlements and civil-service wages – is bound to crowd out spending on new priorities and new policies.
And, despite its economic and political dysfunction, Turkey managed to maintain a positive image,
owing
in part to its ambition to join the European Union.
During the expansion period, producers thrived,
owing
in part to record-high prices.
And since then, populist Euroskepticism has been on the rise, particularly in Italy,
owing
to its frontline position in the migrant and refugee crisis.
Nor is it feasible to generate power locally with a diesel unit,
owing
to high fuel costs and the need for substantial initial investment.
But major new injections of capital into the banking system are unlikely,
owing
to lingering fear from the recent financial past.
Banks responded with ingenious ways of repackaging and selling that debt, but the fundamental problem lay in the channeling of financial flows in an unproductive direction,
owing
to public pressure.
Three out of four households that qualify for federal housing assistance are not receiving it,
owing
to conflicting eligibility requirements, duplicative applications, and complex multi-agency approval processes.
The EU is undergoing fundamental changes, many of which have gone largely unnoticed,
owing
to the overwhelming focus on large-scale top-down reforms.
The forecast errors have three potential sources: failure to recognize the time needed for economic recovery after a financial crisis; underestimation of the “fiscal multipliers” (the size of output loss
owing
to fiscal austerity); and neglect of the “world-trade multiplier” (the tendency for countries to drag each other down as their economies contract).
Likewise, the eurozone’s heavily indebted economies (Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain) have performed considerably worse than projected,
owing
to significant spending cuts and tax hikes.
But, as Chinese growth has decelerated –
owing
partly to decreased exports to Europe – the German GDP forecast has been halved.
But, in a Europe adrift and a world on the edge of the abyss, we cannot take away from him the virtue of being one of the last who – partly
owing
to his famous “arrogance” – is capable of resisting the new nationalist international.
According to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Foshan is China’s most competitive prefecture-level city, and its eighth most competitive city overall,
owing
partly to institutional innovations by local governments at the township, district, and prefecture levels.
In particular, slow growth and revenue losses,
owing
to economic liberalization programs, have reduced the scope for fiscal policy, with serious consequences for poverty and destitution.
American journalism’s business model is collapsing; the people who should be defending Assange are facing salary cuts or unemployment,
owing
in large part to the medium that he represents.
From Turkey’s perspective, however, this is not strictly true,
owing
to the influence that international developments – particularly with regard to ISIS – have on the PKK.
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