Pandemic
in sentence
1982 examples of Pandemic in a sentence
A century ago, in the immediate aftermath of World War I and the devastating Spanish flu pandemic, political leaders proved incapable of finding the right answers to the huge challenges they faced.
Likewise, if they champion liberty above all else, and ignore the contribution of tracking technologies to taming the
pandemic
in Asia, they risk that one day, less prudent and moderate political forces may apply libertarian principles brutally and with total disregard for public welfare.
Argentina, for its part, had a significant debt-sustainability problem long before the
pandemic
arrived.
That statement was issued before COVID-19 had become a
pandemic
and triggered a global recession.
Making matters worse, throughout the debt-restructuring negotiations – which Argentina initiated to bring its debt to a more sustainable level – creditors have dug in their heels and acted as if there was no
pandemic.
Many companies have had no choice but to reshape their business models, now that the
pandemic
is accelerating changes in how we work, consume, and communicate.
This was true before the pandemic, and the urgency of reform is even greater now.
With intensified public health policies around the world modeled on the successes of the Asia-Pacific countries, and with the introduction of vaccines, the
pandemic
can be brought under control, thereby opening the way for a fresh global start on sustainable development.
But she benefited from her effective management of the COVID-19 pandemic, and her compassionate and determined response to the March 2019 Christchurch massacre in which 51 Muslim worshippers were killed.
Offering political alternatives and a path toward a better future remains crucial – not least during a
pandemic.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, its countries should turn to a classic democratictool for dealing with existential challenges: national unity governments supported by broad parliamentary coalitions.
As the COVID-19
pandemic
has escalated, US President Donald Trump – the world’s current populist-in-chief – has been making an even bigger fool of himself than usual.
After first dismissing the coronavirus as the Democrats’ “new hoax,” then promising to “reopen” the US by Easter, Trump has been desperately trying to play catch-up, resulting in disjointed, chaotic policymaking and mendacious claims that he understood the threat posed by the
pandemic
all along.
For starters, the Biden administration will be consumed by the daunting tasks of healing the domestic wounds that Trump has inflicted and correcting America’s critical weaknesses, laid bare by the
pandemic.
A
pandemic
would seem like an unmissable opportunity for cooperation.
Today, the COVID-19
pandemic
appears to be accelerating another withdrawal from globalization.
The
pandemic
will likely have an even larger negative long-term impact on trade, partly because governments increasingly recognize that they need to regard public-health capacity as a national-security imperative.
Policymakers cannot eschew responsibility for the uncontrolled spread of the
pandemic
in the US or its resurgence in Europe.
But amid the fog of the war against the pandemic, one thing is already clear: while Europe may wonder whether it was right not to emulate Australia’s full pandemic-containment drive, it has no reason to regret having rejected America’s misguided strategy.
After the US announced that it was withdrawing from the WHO, China pledged to give it $2 billion over two years to help it fight the COVID-19
pandemic.
Today, the leaders of the world’s largest economies have a similar common interest in preventing either the
pandemic
or a global financial crisis from disrupting the international status quo.
As the COVID-19
pandemic
has starkly demonstrated, the world still faces shared challenges, which raw clientelism simply cannot address.
Before the
pandemic
reached Brazil, state officials used data from both Japan and Singapore (where the virus’s impact was limited) and Italy and Spain (where it was horrific) to generate mathematical projections, and set out to avoid outcomes resembling the latter.
But his recent rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma (his first since the start of the pandemic), was a sparsely attended flop.
After marshaling its own uneven and inconsistent response to the pandemic, the Russian government, in late June, suddenly suspended its quarantine measures in order to hold a parade for the 75th anniversary of the Allied victory over Nazi Germany in World War II.
The Virus that Changed the WorldBERLIN – The COVID-19
pandemic
has mercilessly exposed the weaknesses of institutions upon which the overwhelming majority of the world’s people rely.
Compounding the irony, the world’s most advanced and powerful countries were among the least prepared for the
pandemic.
Even in Europe, nation-states, rather than the European Union, are leading the fight against the
pandemic.
The COVID-19 pandemic, which ultimately will require international coordination, is demonstrating that national interests eventually will have to recede into the background.
The
pandemic
must be followed by a new age of international cooperation and a strengthening of multilateral institutions.
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