Policies
in sentence
9025 examples of Policies in a sentence
Not surprisingly, they will often select sources – whether credible or not – that are critical of globalization and current fiscal and economic
policies.
It endorses
policies
that capture accurately the relationship between “out of area operations” and members’ commitment to their mutual self-defense under Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty.
In July, the G20 Sustainability Action Plan embedded the Paris agreement in G20
policies
and noted that more effective use of financing from multilateral development institutions is key to innovation and private investment in climate action.
By pursuing them, climate action will become a key part of the international community’s work to place infrastructure and the rollout of new technologies and
policies
for energy, water, and mobility at the core of sustainable development.
The lawyers and corporate elites who draft and enact the legislation and regulations that govern globalization are disconnected from those who are supposed to implement the
policies
at the local level.
Meanwhile, the relative moderates who have remained committed to contesting official
policies
by democratic means are sidelined and mocked.
The same will be true of the stagnation that those
policies
bring.
The resulting refusal to work together on the major issues of the day has had a dramatic impact on economic
policies.
The Lega Nord in Italy, the Vlaams Blok in the Netherlands, the supporters of Le Pen's National Front in France, are all examples of parties or movements formed on the common theme of aversion to immigrants and promotion of simplistic
policies
to control them.
This does not mean that the answer is to eliminate heterogeneity and create racially homogenous communities, but an acknowledgment of the reality of these issues is needed in order to start constructing solid public
policies
toward race relations.
These
policies
are seen as a way of offering reparation for past injustices and, more importantly, for creating role models and for overcoming residual and perhaps involuntary discrimination.
By contrast, those who predict generally high real interest rates over the next generation point to low savings rates in the US, high spending driven by demographic burdens in Europe, and feckless governments running chronic deficits and unsustainable fiscal
policies.
I hope to see governments in Western Europe and the US face up to their responsibilities and conduct sensible, sustainable fiscal
policies.
First, if institutions are structured in the right way, political representatives can articulate programs and
policies
that, as Madison put it, “refine and enlarge public views.”
As they close in on effective joint banking and fiscal
policies
incorporating more and more elements of Hamilton’s fiscal federalism, they are increasingly constrained by state politics – exactly as Europe’s leaders are inhibited in the current system.
When the European Union last year considered lifting its symbolic arms embargo against China, none of the governments driving the proposal bothered to consider that this, too, would be symbolic, sending a message all over Asia that Europe was putting its political weight behind Chinese regional
policies.
Only
policies
with bipartisan support will have a chance of passing both chambers.
On the economic front, Trump’s trade
policies
will become even less popular in the months ahead as the American economy cools from the “sugar high” of the corporate tax cut, as growing uncertainty about global trade policy hamstrings business investment, and as both the budget deficit and interest rates rise.
Stock-market investors continue to hold out hope that Trump can push through
policies
to stimulate growth and increase corporate profits.
The good news is that the administration has not pursued radically protectionist policies, such as branding countries as currency manipulators, introducing across-the-board tariffs, or pushing for the border adjustment tax.
It is the one policy that will always stimulate nominal demand, even when other
policies
– such as debt-financed fiscal deficits or negative interest rates – are ineffective.
After all, other
policies
to support demand growth, or a failure to implement any policy, can be equally dangerous.
And alternative
policies
will in some circumstances have adverse side effects.
A Better Way to Fight Climate ChangeNEW YORK – Of all major world regions, Europe has worked the hardest to implement
policies
aimed at countering human-caused climate change.
The need for all major world regions to adopt practical and far-sighted energy
policies
is more urgent than ever.
Finance ministers and central banks frequently urged wage moderation, with many countries even introducing formal
policies
governing wages and prices.
But these
policies
proved largely ineffective.
A better strategy would also entail
policies
that address the structural drivers of stagnant wages and consumption.
But the potential importance of structural
policies
should not be ignored.
But deliberate
policies
will be needed to stimulate it.
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