Particularly
in sentence
6679 examples of Particularly in a sentence
Of course, history –
particularly
financial history – never repeats itself exactly.
This comes largely at the expense of small farmers and consumers,
particularly
the poor.
If a shareholder dislikes, say, how GM’s directors are running the company (and, in the 1980’s and 1990’s, they were running it into the ground), she is free to nominate new directors, but she must pay their hefty elections costs, and should expect that no one,
particularly
not GM, will ever reimburse her.
Stanley Sue, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Davis, has studied suicide, which is
particularly
common among Asian-American women (in other ethnic groups, more males commit suicide than females).
Nonetheless, elected officials find a Tobin tax highly appealing, because it could blunt criticism and divert attention from fundamental, but politically paralyzing, problems surrounding economic policy,
particularly
budgets, debt, and slow growth.
Setting international development goals has made a huge difference in people’s lives,
particularly
in the poorest places on the planet.
Reliance on the traditional method has resulted in missed opportunities,
particularly
given that productive public-sector investment can more than pay for itself.
A more muscular response will require an awareness of the nature of the challenge and a willingness to meet it by investing heavily in key areas –
particularly
education, health care, and infrastructure.
For the implication is that right-wing populist parties, like the Front National and its equivalents in Austria, Italy, Denmark and elsewhere may do better in future, not worse,
particularly
if monetary union prolongs the economic pain and uncertainty that large groups within all electorates are now feeling.
The two faces of integration (explored in the EBRD’s 2008 Transition Report) have been
particularly
visible in finance.
In some areas,
particularly
macroeconomic management involving the accumulation and use of stabilization funds, resource-rich transition countries have performed fairly well.
The crisis that began in 2008 underscored the importance of market-supporting policy institutions and policies,
particularly
in the financial sector.
A long agenda of institutional reform remains,
particularly
in Central Asia and some East European and Western Balkans countries.
Moreover, significant sector-specific reforms are needed even in some Central European and Baltic countries,
particularly
in sustainable energy and energy efficiency, transport, and the financial sector, where regulatory and supervisory regimes require strengthening, financing of small and medium-sized firms needs to be improved, and local capital markets must be developed.
But the impact of even a small number of disruptions to supply chains can be highly significant,
particularly
for the Asia-Pacific region.
The situation is
particularly
worrisome in Nigeria, where nearly nine million primary-school-age children are not enrolled, and millions more – especially girls – are denied access to secondary education.
In the meantime, however, Hamas is willing to form alliances with the nationalists,
particularly
the militant faction of Fatah.
Perhaps the unsustainable pre-2008 bubble was larger in the UK; perhaps the UK’s structure
(particularly
the larger share of finance in its GDP and the continued decline in energy output) made the initial downturn less reversible.
This debate is
particularly
animated with respect to Chinese investment in Africa – a continent with a long history of political, economic, and commercial exploitation by foreign powers.
But the scale of its victory – a whopping 59% of the vote – was shocking, and largely a triumph for anti-establishment forces,
particularly
the Five Star Movement.
This is
particularly
true in Great Britain, where a number of members of Parliament have used their housing allowances to enhance their income, sometimes legally and sometimes not.
For example, there was no awareness of the challenge posed by climate change, and that all countries (including those in the developing world) must reduce their greenhouse-gas emissions and adapt to changes that will be
particularly
adverse to poor countries.
Yet Alawites and other minorities,
particularly
Christians, do remain largely supportive of the regime, given their all-too-real fear of sectarian reprisals.
Understanding all of the factors at work,
particularly
class tensions, is crucial to evaluating – and addressing – the conflict.
That will be
particularly
challenging for Bernanke.
But the US was not
particularly
interested in a larger World Bank; instead of using its considerable influence – reflected in its power to appoint the Bank’s president – to create a stronger institution capable of responding to new demands, it went along with what became a modest Bank recapitalization.
Nor are the non-poor faring
particularly
well, as wage growth has remained virtually flat for a very long time, even as corporate profits are booming.
The unwinding of the US economy might even begin in 2006,
particularly
if Japan continues to grow out of its doldrums, the US housing market softens dramatically, and Europe’s economic recovery accelerates.
In our European Security Strategy, it was deemed one of the key strategic threats facing the European Union, and to fight it we are using all instruments at our disposal,
particularly
in the intelligence area.
Even the largest economies are vulnerable,
particularly
if they are highly dependent on debt finance.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Countries
Their
There
Where
Other
Would
About
Economic
People
World
Could
Global
Important
Given
Financial
While
Should
Political
Growth