Policies
in sentence
9025 examples of Policies in a sentence
In Mishel’s words, “if free-traders had actually cared about the working class, they could have supported a full range of
policies
to support robust wage growth: full employment, collective bargaining, high labor standards, a robust minimum wage, and so on.”
His position seemed less to deny the existence of global warming than to insist that
policies
mitigating climate change not impose an unreasonable burden on American companies.
Trump may similarly come to appreciate the advantages of working through the IMF when a crisis erupts in Venezuela, or in Mexico as a result of his own
policies.
While the US presidential election is not particularly focused on policy at the moment, the campaign will soon end, at which point people will govern and
policies
will be adopted.
Given that both Republicans and Democrats have criticized short-termism, it is possible that some of those
policies
might aim to address it.
When the time comes to revisit international
policies
on global warming, two things should happen.
Between now and his inauguration on January 20, he will need to hone his
policies.
While North Korea had done much over the preceding years to warrant a more critical eye, in retrospect these
policies
set back prospects for peace and stability in the region.
After all, North Korea’s reaction to the Bush administration’s
policies
was to drop out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, restart its nuclear program, and further develop its weapons production.
Proportional representation is widely viewed as one factor that promotes the implementation of redistributive
policies
by providing a political voice to minorities.
Slow growth in Japan over the last decade was due not to insufficiently aggressive macroeconomic policies, but to an unfavorable demographic trend.
Instead, they were established because of decades of promiscuously interventionist economic
policies.
Now Obama faces defeat in the mid-term elections at the hands of Republicans whose past
policies
created many of the problems that weigh him down today.
The rise of China and India may create instability, but it is a problem with precedents, and we can learn from history about how
policies
can affect the outcome.
Just like successful coups, failed coups can have a major impact on countries’ foreign and security
policies.
In the 1920's and 1930's, the Belgian authorities enacted
policies
that defined the population along ethnic lines and favored the Tutsi in a deliberate - and successful - effort to divide society and fan resentment among Hutu leaders.
You might call it a matter of “legal empowerment”: of ensuring that laws and
policies
reside not only in books or courtrooms, but also on the street and in the home, within the grasp of every person.
The EU, Japan, and the US would be even more effective if they aligned their
policies
to prevent criminals from accessing their markets and enabled legitimate operators to benefit from a “supercharged” level of access.
The same proposed
policies
for closing global trade imbalances also, by and large, help address each country’s domestic economic concerns.
“A possible implication of this finding,” the ECB concluded, “is that
policies
aimed at stimulating aggregate demand (including fiscal and monetary policies) should play an even more important role in the economic policy mix.”
The capitalists in question are nothing short of the upper echelon of corporate America: the Business Roundtable, a powerful group composed of the CEOs of major US corporations, which promotes pro-business public
policies.
Such
policies
embody a country’s choice in developing one or several sports.
Even in the United States,
policies
have all too often been deliberately designed to enable – rather than to discourage – tax avoidance via tax havens.
Indeed, far too many of the
policies
being recommended for primary schools have no scientific basis.
The second reason why the Fed has global responsibilities is that its
policies
affect monetary conditions worldwide.
Carbon Taxes at the BarricadesLONDON – For governments everywhere, the shadow of the gilets jaunes (“yellow vests”), whose protests wracked France for several Saturdays before Christmas, now looms over
policies
to combat climate change.
To the protesters, these seemed to be
policies
imposed by an out-of-touch metropolitan elite, many of whose members had recently received a large cut in wealth taxes, which was introduced following business leaders’ successful lobbying of the finance minister at a conference held alongside the Aix-en-Provence Opera Festival.
The precise mix of
policies
must of course vary by country; but without more thoughtful approaches than what was attempted in France, action to address climate change will be dangerously constrained.
Unfortunately, advocates of aggressive policing have no interest in breaking the cycle of violence, and they have dismissed evidence-based public
policies
that could transform lives throughout the region.
But forcing governments to implement these
policies
will take political will and popular support.
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