Partly
in sentence
1761 examples of Partly in a sentence
This will be
partly
owing to advances in “deep learning,” which uses multilayer neural networks that were first theorized in the 1980s.
Haiti’s prospects are improving in other areas as well, owing
partly
to the UN’s commitment to the country.
In some European countries, where income inequality has remained in check, this has been a component of a deliberate strategy to maintain employment growth and competitiveness in the tradable part of the economy, with wage restraint
partly
shared across the income distribution.
This decision
partly
reflects inadequate aid flows; but it may also be rooted in the costs of the WFP’s own operations.
And yet, through it all, growth rates have remained stubbornly low and unemployment rates unacceptably high,
partly
because the increase in money supply following QE has not led to credit creation to finance private consumption or investment.
Inequality’s precise impact on individual well-being remains controversial,
partly
because of the complex nature of the metrics needed to gauge it accurately.
The decision to go to war was
partly
based on faulty intelligence.
Lin’s success is delicious,
partly
because it contradicts so many cultural prejudices about Asian-American athletes.
On this, the IMF is
partly
right.
In any case, not much weight, in my judgment, should be given to the IMF’s statistical studies of the impact of foreign aid on growth,
partly
because the results do not appear to be very robust.
Profiles in European DenialATHENS – Europe’s establishment is luxuriating in two recent announcements that would have been momentous even if they were only
partly
accurate: The end of Greece’s debt crisis, and a Franco-German accord to redesign the eurozone.
Of course, neither sector is an example of free-market economics, but that is
partly
the point: free-market rhetoric has been used selectively – embraced when it serves special interests and discarded when it does not.
This is
partly
why China’s foreign-exchange reserves have swelled so rapidly, from $250 billion in 2000 to $4 trillion this year.
Partly
motivated by a desire to counterbalance China’s rising geopolitical influence, Japan and the US have sought to draw India into a multilateral alliance consisting of democratic countries in the Asia-Pacific region.
The program would at least
partly
pay for itself, with additional payments to workers on short hours offset by lower unemployment (and thus lower payments to those who are completely without work).
In other words, Hezbollah’s survival strategy
partly
depends on the protective shell of a rickety Lebanese state.
These responses are, of course,
partly
complementary.
To be sure, no serious people are claiming the full Reagan effect today –
partly
because the Congressional Budget Office has kept everyone honest by showing in detail that the tax cuts will increase the deficit by close to $900 billion.
The same is true for workers elsewhere in Europe and in the United States, an economic reality that is
partly
responsible for the rise of populist politics.
The explanation is
partly
political.
Likewise, competitiveness losses have been
partly
reversed as wages have lagged productivity growth, thus reducing unit labor costs, and some structural reforms are ongoing.
Moreover, being at least
partly
part of the club will bring ultimate full membership into closer reach.
At the same time, Sarkozy has been able to emerge as the natural leader of the right
partly
because Chirac has been less of a liability than many people, including the experts, predicted.
If major banks had had a “lean against the wind” strategy in reserve, that would have influenced expectations and at least
partly
stabilized asset prices, possibly mitigating – or even averting – the most damaging effects of the financial crisis.
What resulted was a
partly
flawed answer to the problem.
Back in 2003,
partly
in response to the Argentine crisis, the IMF proposed a new framework for adjudicating sovereign debts.
In China – and in Russia (and
partly
in Brazil and India) – state capitalism has become more entrenched, which does not bode well for growth.
Whether such reforms can go deep enough to make a difference depends
partly
on whether they gain traction elsewhere.
Last year, US official statistics reported a 43% decrease in childhood obesity since 2004, mainly during the second half of the decade – a shift that may have been driven, at least partly, by targeted interventions.
That is all the more important in periods – like the current one – of rapid change, high volatility, and only
partly
predictable systemic instability.
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