Pandemic
in sentence
1982 examples of Pandemic in a sentence
The COVID-19 pandemic, by making the tacit overt, has raised awareness of this challenge – and interesting findings are beginning to appear.
A policy of deeply negative rates in the advanced economies would also be a huge boon to emerging and developing economies, which are being slammed by falling commodity prices, fleeing capital, high debt, and weak exchange rates, not to mention the early stages of the
pandemic.
Tragically, when the Federal Reserve conducted its 2019 review of policy instruments, discussion of how to implement deep negative rates was effectively taken off the table, forcing the Fed’s hand in the
pandemic.
In a recent survey of Americans who have worked remotely during the coronavirus pandemic, three-fifths of respondents say they would prefer to continue to do so.
Among other things, the
pandemic
shows us that ensuring digital connectivity for those who lack it is essential, and may even be more important than subsidizing roads and bridges.
Over the past few months, the COVID-19
pandemic
has highlighted not only the benefits of broadband, but also the imperative of providing access to everyone.
In the circumstances caused by the pandemic, many countries’ repayment obligations could have devastating social consequences if they are not adjusted.
Experts predict that the number of hungry people will double during the COVID-19
pandemic.
Finding creative ways to distribute aid during the COVID-19
pandemic
is crucial.
The reality is that the
pandemic
affects all of us, and we must all do our part to mitigate the impact on the most vulnerable.
There is no readily available vaccine, and global health systems around the world have proven largely unprepared and unequipped to manage a fast-moving
pandemic.
Governments absolutely must adopt a mission-oriented approach to address major collective challenges like climate change and the COVID-19
pandemic.
By exploiting the rhetoric of a “moonshot,” Johnson has done a great disservice to those who are working hard behind the scenes on credible plans to mitigate the worst effects of the
pandemic.
The heavily globalized, consumer- and finance-driven US economy was not designed for a
pandemic.
In a
pandemic
– where every infected person is a threat to the entire population – this is a formula for disaster.
In a
pandemic
there is no acceptable alternative to making care universal and free of cost.
But controlling a
pandemic
nevertheless requires mobilization: a comprehensive approach spanning resources, services, finance, and information.
Right now, the imperative is to fast-track packages and policies that help to fight the health crisis, protect the vulnerable, and pave the way to restarting our economies once the
pandemic
is past its peak.
The COVID-19
pandemic
underlines the fact that we are all in this together: no country is immune from major global threats.
And once the worst of the COVID-19
pandemic
is over, we must come together in our workplaces, communities, and homes to support the realization of a healthier and climate-safe future.
They seem unwilling to recognize the magnitude of the grief and devastation that the
pandemic
has caused.
Likening stay-at-home orders aimed at protecting public health to slavery – as US Attorney General William Barr recently did – is not only grotesque; it is an insult to all who have died during this
pandemic.
America’s COVID ElectionWASHINGTON – The
pandemic
that US President Donald Trump has handled so disastrously – over 200,000 deaths from COVID-19 are expected in the United States by Election Day – is persuading an unprecedented number of voters to cast their ballot by mail rather than expose themselves at the polls.
The voting is taking place amid conditions as challenging as any outside of wartime: the pandemic, the consequent collapse of the US economy, and the loss of 22 million jobs so far, with little cause for optimism that most of them will return.
Now, with the
pandemic
poised to coincide with the flu season, COVID-19 will become even more of a menace.
How Biden Can Create Good JobsCAMBRIDGE – The COVID-19
pandemic
will leave the US economy with a deeply scarred labor market.
Long before the pandemic, the US labor market was becoming increasingly polarized.
For liberals, a dominant view is that, thanks to Trump’s mishandling of the COVID-19
pandemic
and the economic crisis it unleashed, Republican and Trump-leaning independent voters are coming to their senses.
Americans have forgotten about Trump’s mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic, which is subsiding as vaccines come to market or mask wearing and social distancing take hold and finally work.
Exit polls show that voters’ top concerns were the economy, jobs, and the COVID-19
pandemic.
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