Partly
in sentence
1761 examples of Partly in a sentence
To be sure, China may have a strong tendency to create bubbles,
partly
because people in a fast-growing economy become less risk-averse.
At the same time, productivity growth in the EU’s services sector has been lagging behind developments in the United States (even given the possibility that pre-crisis productivity growth in US financial services was
partly
notional).
The inability of unconventional monetary policies to prevent outright deflation
partly
reflects the fact that such policies seek to weaken the currency, thereby improving net exports and increasing inflation.
To be sure, China faces plenty of challenges of its own, owing
partly
to a growth model that produced significant imbalances.
The depreciation of the US dollar – which fell 10%, in trade-weighted terms, in 2017 – has helped to drive up oil prices, but it is likely to be halted and then
partly
reversed.
For example, the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) originally targeted the purchase of complex securitized assets that had lost value and stopped trading, but had to be
partly
altered to direct infusions of capital into banks.
While this can be explained
partly
by the appeal of the corresponding lifestyle, it may also be a way to increase their overall lifetime income.
That confidence may be derived
partly
from the business-friendly tax legislation that was recently enacted in the US.
The low-key Shanghai party boss is acceptable to Hu
partly
because the elder Xi was a comrade-in-arms of late liberal party chief Hu Yaobang, Hu’s former mentor.
This sense of injustice is only
partly
contained by political considerations in the US, thanks to the “Obama factor,” a rare phenomenon that can be described as the restoration of trust in one’s political leaders.
This reversal is driven
partly
by structural factors, including a plateau in the expansion of global value chains and a turning point in the process of structural transformation in China and other growth frontiers.
Instead of suppressing the memory of the refugees, Israel needs to recognize that in 1948 the land was bisected by the sword, and that the Jewish state came into being
partly
because of the massive uprooting and dispossession of Palestinian communities.
Of course, the transfer of millions of manufacturing jobs to countries like China and Mexico
partly
offset this trend, even if it could reasonably be argued that more jobs were created than lost; that the US became more competitive thanks to this shift; that China has transformed itself into a major consumer market; and that even Mexico has made some progress.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership trade negotiations came to a favorable conclusion last year
partly
because, again, little was done to protect US workers.
Progress has been painfully slow,
partly
because officials have been fire-fighting, and
partly
because urgent domestic political imperatives compete with the desire to establish new, globally applicable mechanisms that would provide a stable underpinning for the international financial system and prevent regulatory arbitrage and the de-globalization of finance.
This is at least
partly
the result of leaving education too much to the market: those with money are highly educated, and those with insufficient means are not educated enough.
That impact
partly
reflects the highly problematic nature of the Chinese government’s long-awaited move to liberalize interest rates.
With an emerging infrastructure in place for cooperative research, sustained improvement in outcomes
partly
reflected an ever-increasing understanding that childhood cancers are diverse.
Add to this the rise of populist and nationalist parties in Britain,
partly
a consequence of the political and economic alienation that have resulted from globalization and economic troubles, and Labour and the Conservatives are fighting over dwindling support.
In developed economies, corporate profitability has been steadily rising,
partly
owing to “shareholder-primacy” strategies that focus on short-term decision-making, cost-cutting measures, and other forms of financial engineering encouraged by institutional investors.
World leaders appear
partly
ignorant and
partly
deceptive in responding to the allegations.
This disillusionment arises, at least partly, from people’s own experience of work, whether exclusion from the labor market, poor working conditions, or low wages.
Owing
partly
to a strengthening renminbi, China’s total economic output grew to $12.7 trillion in 2017, representing a massive increase of 13% ($1.5 trillion) in just 12 months.
In these scenarios, the most stable outcome tends to be a draw in which both sides are
partly
satisfied.
There are signs that the oligarchs’ grip is beginning to loosen, owing
partly
to internal conflicts among them.
FDI in the country will continue to garner substantial returns,
partly
owing to local-government hospitality.
Of course, this is
partly
because of the changes in the relative economic and political power of the US and China over the past decade, and especially during the current global economic crisis.
After the war, as things settled down, governments tried to return to gold,
partly
as a symbol of a return to normalcy.
This might work – at least
partly
– in the current crisis, but it will not be able to prevent future divergences in competitiveness if domestic demand diverges again.
This can
partly
be attributed to the collapse of heavily polluting Soviet-style industry.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
Owing
Least
Countries
Growth
Economic
Would
Reflects
Result
Other
About
There
Government
People
Years
Global
Could
While
Political