Pandemic
in sentence
1982 examples of Pandemic in a sentence
We will then see whether the consequences of this experiment with socialism last well beyond the end of the
pandemic.
Even without the pandemic, the road to a stronger, more equal EU-Africa partnership would have been difficult.
The
pandemic
has demonstrated the practical implications of inequality; revealed the excessive dependence of critical value chains on certain economies, particularly China; and exposed the vulnerabilities of the international finance system.
Given the likelihood of another health crisis – experts warn that
pandemic
risks are rising – this means, among other things, ensuring stable supplies of critical medical equipment.
In the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, economists, economic policymakers, and bodies like the G7 should humbly acknowledge that “all appropriate tools” imply, above all, those wielded by medical practitioners and epidemiologists.
This is because the COVID-19
pandemic
is putting the spotlight on one of the less-noticed distortions of the international aid system: it does exactly the opposite of what the evidence requires.
But as the COVID-19
pandemic
has made abundantly clear, the need for GPGs is proliferating, and private markets will by definition not finance them.
Like today’s COVID-19 pandemic, these challenges will be devastatingly contemptuous of national borders and nativist governments.
Owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, US prime-age employment is back down to 76%, just a little higher than it was in 2010.
To be sure, the EU’s sovereign states should stand together and help those hit hardest by the crisis – above all Italy, which was the first European country to be affected by the
pandemic
and has suffered 31,000 COVID-19 deaths, the highest number in the EU.
Keeping Up with the FedNEW HAVEN – As the COVID-19
pandemic
drives the global economy into recession, the temptation to pursue aggressive monetary easing is growing.
In addition to addressing an out-of-control pandemic, rising inequality, and the climate crisis, there is also an urgent need to rescue American democracy.
But, even with rock-bottom borrowing costs, the economic fallout from the
pandemic
has forced one vulnerable country after another to declare sovereign default, or to signal that it may do so soon.
Since the start of the pandemic, a broad global consensus on sovereign-debt restructuring has gradually taken shape.
And if the
pandemic
is not confronted with an aggressive and timely policy response, its effects are likely to be long-lasting, especially if amplification mechanisms are activated.
The COVID-19
pandemic
thus represents an opportunity for the EU to create a powerful crisis-management mechanism, which pools member states’ resources and channels them toward a coordinated fiscal policy.
How the G20 Should Lead, AgainSEOUL – The COVID-19
pandemic
has cast a pall over the global economy, making it impossible to anticipate even the near future.
To address both the
pandemic
and the economic fallout from it, the G20 must do three things.
The COVID-19
pandemic
confronts us with an even tougher task, because we must resolve a health crisis and an economic collapse simultaneously.
The
pandemic
has provided a major boost to these developments.
African governments are under pressure to continue servicing their external loans, leaving them with few resources to confront a historic
pandemic
and its economic fallout.
This would save countries time by quickly giving them a two-year repayment freeze in order to deal with the pandemic, without preventing them from tapping credit markets in the future to fund economic recovery.
Science helped the world with the
pandemic
H1N1, SARS, and Ebola viruses, and science will once again help the world overcome this new threat.
Avoiding a COVID-19 Migration CrisisDHAKA – Closing national borders is a natural response to the coronavirus pandemic, and governments stand on firm legal ground when they do so.
Despite this, migrant communities are most vulnerable to the economic fallout of the
pandemic.
In a pandemic, people often cross borders for health services.
To avoid a migration crisis, countries must integrate migrants into the national
pandemic
strategy, not only as affected people, but also as individuals who can fight the spread of the coronavirus.
The
pandemic
is an unprecedented emergency that demands such exceptional responses.
Yet, despite the inevitable recession, the
pandemic
has created a unique opportunity to promote the growth of small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) on the African continent.
Venezuela’s health-care infrastructure was crumbling well before the pandemic, but the COVID-19 crisis has pushed it to the point of collapse.
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Economic
Countries
World
During
Their
Which
Crisis
Response
Before
Health
Governments
Would
Economy
People
Could
Should
Other
Already
There