Particularly
in sentence
6679 examples of Particularly in a sentence
While emerging economies –
particularly
those economies that adopt flexible exchange rates and limit their external debt – may yet avoid a crisis, there is no guarantee that they will be able to do so.
Instead, the economists suggest focusing on reducing barriers to employment,
particularly
for women.
Wars provide the opportunity for humiliation in very stark ways, because defeat on the battlefield tends to bring not just ridicule and derision, but also clear losses,
particularly
of territory.
During that period, China’s self-image as East Asia’s preeminent power was shattered by a series of defeats, which were
particularly
painful when inflicted by the upstart Japan.
The same is true of all the aforementioned humiliations: they are
particularly
painful because an Asian neighbor, not a distant power, inflicted them.
Populists Can be RightDoes the rise of left-leaning governments in Latin America,
particularly
the election of Evo Morales as President of Bolivia, presage a shift to the hard left across the continent?
The region’s chronic under-investment in education,
particularly
in science and technology, is partly responsible for its economic stagnation during the past quarter-century.
This blame game, which has long been central to disputes over international economic policy and trade tensions, is
particularly
contentious today.
Having grown up in the Soviet Union, I am
particularly
sensitive to the impact of perverse scientific theories on a society.
More than half of all manufactured goods consumed in the US are made abroad,
particularly
low technology, mass-produced labor-intensive products.
But, while abolishing energy subsidies is absolutely essential to balance the budget and put the economy on a sound footing, these steps also risk hitting eastern Ukraine, which contains a substantial Russophone minority,
particularly
hard.
The G-7 recovery has been unusually sluggish, notwithstanding large and unprecedented policy stimulus
(particularly
in the US).
By contrast, emerging markets like China have less sophisticated systems and evolve more complex contractual/institutional links over time,
particularly
through globalized transactions.
Our societies urgently need more investment,
particularly
to convert heavily polluting, energy-intensive, and high-carbon production into sustainable economies based on the efficient use of natural resources and a shift to low-carbon energy sources.
By contrast, the insistence on minimal government and reliance on the market led to precipitous declines in public infrastructure investment,
particularly
in agriculture.
For example, some experts believe that a nation’s electric power grid may be
particularly
susceptible.
Such a choice will be determined by hard power,
particularly
if China agrees to economic sanctions.
While this is not a
particularly
generous proportion of rich-country income (roughly one-fourth of one percent of their combined gross national products), it is a lot of money just the same.
The countries of North Africa also need energy –
particularly
more electricity and new networks to support urban and industrial development.
But the challenges of group choice can be daunting,
particularly
given the divergent interests and concerns of the group’s members.
The study of social choice as a formal discipline first came into its own in the late eighteenth century, when the subject was pioneered by French mathematicians,
particularly
J. C. Borda and Marquis de Condorcet.
It is essential,
particularly
for making judgments about social welfare, to compare different individuals’ gains and losses and to take note of their relative affluence, which cannot be immediately deduced only from people’s rankings of social alternatives.
Many economists argued that these clever models were flawed, because the punishment threat was not credible,
particularly
in the case of a systemic meltdown affecting a large part of the financial system.
At the same time, financial-sector problems may be
particularly
difficult to address: if politicians emphasize the need for action too strongly in order to get a mandate, they might precipitate the very turmoil that they seek to contain.
Rather, the mandates of systemically influential central banks should be expanded to account for spillovers, forcing policymakers to avoid unconventional measures with substantial adverse effects on other economies,
particularly
if the domestic benefits are questionable.
Education,
particularly
of women, stands in the way of achieving this goal.
But these are insufficient bases of resilience,
particularly
given the tectonic shifts occurring next door, in Iraq and Syria.
The nineteenth-century “Know Nothing” Party was built upon opposition to immigrants,
particularly
the Irish.
Despite unequivocal evidence of its positive social and economic impact, education –
particularly
at the preschool and primary levels – suffers from chronic under-investment.
People in the US, Indonesia, China, Iran, and Great Britain are
particularly
likely to perceive greater equality.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Countries
Their
There
Where
Other
Would
About
Economic
People
World
Could
Global
Important
Given
Financial
While
Should
Political
Growth