Permanently
in sentence
386 examples of Permanently in a sentence
Under this system, fewer students who intend to work
permanently
overseas will accept government subsidies, and more money will be available for students who wish to practice in their country of origin, or for investments in health-care infrastructure.
Rapid population growth also tends to accelerate the depletion of environmental resources both locally and globally, and can
permanently
undermine the prospects for their recovery.
First, and most optimistically, wage earners throughout the new EMU zone understand the force of
permanently
fixed exchange rates.
What if the sources of economic growth have dried up – not temporarily, but
permanently?
But did Greenspan really expect interest rates to remain
permanently
at 1% – a negative real interest rate?
On the supply side,
permanently
lower output makes fiscal adjustment even more compulsory; but, on the demand side, a weak private economy lacks the resilience needed to weather fiscal retrenchment.
Bringing Serbia into the EU would
permanently
stabilize the regional order and – at the time when Europe is increasingly wary of indefinite military commitments -- offer the prospect of a concrete exit strategy for NATO troops in Kosovo.
And in his written work on this topic, he has seamlessly shifted between a definition of secular stagnation that involves
permanently
lower growth rates as a result of low investment and
permanently
lower employment as a result of deficient aggregate demand.
The existing power relations in the Middle East have indeed been
permanently
shaken and, indeed, revolutionized.
Monetary policymakers, the argument goes, should be independent from the political system, because, when elections near, politicians will likely pressure them to “buy” temporarily higher employment at the cost of
permanently
higher inflation.
As I told the Nobel committee last year when accepting the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of my organization, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, nuclear arms are a “madman’s gun held
permanently
to our temple.”
Leading intellectuals recommend that Europe’s periphery be
permanently
disempowered for the sake of Franco-German leadership.
Instead, they imposed harsh terms, hoping to weaken Germany
permanently.
The experience of a medical specialist moving
permanently
to the UK from India is very different from that of a construction worker from Romania hoping to secure a better salary in France.
Germans, who since reunification in 1990 know what they are talking about when it comes to such transfers, do not want to hear about a Europe where rich regions would
permanently
finance pockets of under-development.
Many ultimately choose to immigrate to America permanently, and it is relatively easy for them to do so, thanks to a society that still welcomes outsiders with open arms (even if things have become more difficult since 2001).
Worse still, the government is considering a constitutional amendment that would
permanently
strip nationality rights from thousands of Dominican of Haitian descent.
For most of the nineteenth century and well into the Cold War era, re-election of a sitting president was generally prohibited in the great majority of Latin American countries, owing to a general fear of leaders remaining
permanently
in power, abetted by the prevalence of electoral fraud.
If the West is perceived to be attempting to maintain the leadership it snatched 200 years ago by industrializing first, thereby denying the post-Confucians the fruits of their dynamism permanently, the Chinese, in particular, will conclude that pluralism is eyewash and that the West’s worldview in fact replicates their traditional one.
By 2040, in the IEA’s optimistic scenario, solar power in Sub-Saharan Africa will produce 14kWh per person per year, less than what is needed to keep a single two-watt LED
permanently
lit.
National economic dynamism and resilience emerge from allowing international competition, not from insulating domestic high-tech firms permanently.The current US-China trade conflict has been decades in the making; rolling it back will require both sides to acknowledge that old ways of thinking on trade have become counterproductive.
National economic dynamism and resilience emerge from allowing international competition, not from insulating domestic high-tech firms
permanently.
To be sure, demand contraction was inevitable in these countries, given that they were living far beyond their means; no economy can
permanently
sustain a rate of demand growth exceeding that of GDP.
In general, terms-of-trade improvements and capital inflows do not continue permanently: they either stabilize or eventually reverse direction.
Although the industry’s environmental footprint is smaller than that of agriculture and urbanization, extracting materials from the ground can still
permanently
harm ecosystems and lead to biodiversity loss.
They will become like the Mezzogiorno, or like East Germany for that matter, and will
permanently
suffer from the so-called “Dutch Disease,” with chronic unemployment and underperformance but an acceptable living standard.
After all, the tigers were supposed to have eaten the "old countries" for breakfast, or at least to have left them
permanently
maimed.
The country would then have clear, internationally recognized borders, enabling it to end
permanently
the conflict with its Arab neighbors.
The barriers to growth in the past were an unholy alliance among oligarchic interests and political parties, scandalous procurement, clientelism, the
permanently
broken media, overly accommodating banks, weak tax authorities, and a weighed-down, fearful judiciary.
Being
permanently
based here allows us to be closer to all of the stakeholders – the Transitional Federal Institutions and other administrations, NGOs and other civil-society groups, business leaders, journalists, and the Somali people in general.
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