Paying
in sentence
1450 examples of Paying in a sentence
Far from receiving subsidies, the fossil-fuel industry should be
paying
for climate change.
And the release of the Panama Papers has revealed how the wealthiest avoid
paying
taxes.
This is true, but the same result can be achieved by
paying
off foreign debt, which is a better policy, especially at the outset, when the fund is trying to build up credibility.
That means
paying
down debt and rebuilding savings, leaving consumer demand mired in protracted weakness.
When both bubbles burst, over-extended US households had no choice but to cut back and rebuild their damaged balance sheets by
paying
down outsize debt burdens and rebuilding depleted savings.
The attempt to ensure that the losses are not recognized might tempt the Fed to rely excessively on untested, uncertain, and costly monetary-policy tools – like
paying
high interest rates on reserves to induce banks not to lend.
Why has Gemrany become obsessed with the fear of
paying
too much?
The other star was Sarah Palin, the darling of the populist Tea Party crowds, who began by
paying
her respect to Martin Luther King, Jr.
No doubt quite a few of them would have trouble
paying
the astronomical costs of American health-care bills without government assistance.
Today, we are
paying
the price for not attending to Europe's shared values and common mission.
In recent speeches and discussions with current and former central bankers, I have been criticized for focusing too much on the 0.9% trend of the past 21 quarters and
paying
too little attention to the 2% recovery phase of the post-crisis period.
With tensions between federal and state law-enforcement agencies rising, many Californians are being put in the untenable position of
paying
state fines or violating federal laws.
Meanwhile, the slow-growing sectors risk falling into a “balance-sheet recession," with highly indebted SOEs and local governments becoming so focused on
paying
down their debts that they stop investing in needed infrastructure, even when interest rates fall.
If Merkel’s government believes that
paying
lip service to growth is enough, it is playing with fire: a euro collapse in which not only Germans would be badly burned.
Many developing countries have made progress since the 1990’s in shifting from dollar-denominated debt toward foreign direct investment and other types of capital inflows, or in
paying
down their liabilities altogether.
If those arrangements are secure, users of land have an incentive not just to implement best practices for their use of it
(paying
attention to, say, environmental impacts), but also to invest more.
Recent events in Venezuela imply as many perils and unforeseen, perverse consequences as in Ukraine, and the international community, as well as most Latin American democracies, should be
paying
much more attention.
Responding to Russia’s razing of Aleppo with carrots would amount to
paying
tribute to a cynical, criminal policy.
With the United Nations sustainable development agenda ambitiously targeting universal access to energy by 2030, policymakers are
paying
more attention to electrification, and development-finance institutions and partners are making more funding available.
In the last three years alone, fines for violations of the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) – under which corporations with ties to the US face criminal penalties for
paying
bribes to foreign government officials – have exceeded $2.1 billion.
But this approach is risky – akin to
paying
the fox to guard the hen house.
Since Abdullah became king in August 2005, high oil prices have sustained the old system of patronage,
paying
people for silence and stifling any initiative for change.
A half-century of working together, plus a decade and a half of adapting to new threats and demands, is
paying
off.
If all countries put their own interests first,
paying
no heed to others, competition will quickly overwhelm common interests.
European leaders are arguing, with some justification, that their exporters are
paying
the price for America’s huge trade imbalance with Asian and oil-exporting countries.
This should be all the more true for eurozone countries, like Italy or Spain, that are now
paying
risk premia in excess of 3-4%.
Then, in December, the New York City police arrested an Indian consular official, Devyani Khobragade, for
paying
a domestic worker less than the minimum wage in the United States and for falsifying the worker’s visa application.
Private health insurance would make such excessive saving unnecessary by pooling relatively small premiums from individuals – or from their employers – and then
paying
out to those who are hit with large medical bills.
Paying
for the Past in 2005The beginning of each year is high season for economic forecasters.
But
paying
for and delivering these vaccines to the most vulnerable citizens of low-income countries poses a significant challenge.
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