Policies
in sentence
9025 examples of Policies in a sentence
Abe is doing what many economists (including me) have been calling for in the US and Europe: a comprehensive program entailing monetary, fiscal, and structural
policies.
This includes
policies
aimed at restructuring the economy, improving productivity, and increasing labor-force participation, especially by women.
Family policies, together with changes in corporate labor practices, can reinforce changing mores, leading to greater (and more effective) female labor-force participation.
A compromise was found with the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) and its provisions for adhering to the Maastricht criteria, which sought to quantify the fiscal soundness of sovereign states without actually interfering with their budget and tax
policies.
And the EU does have a budget for reducing them, which it uses to support its cohesion
policies.
How they use monetary, fiscal, structural, institutional, and regulatory
policies
may differ, but each will ultimately be judged by how close he comes to achieving that goal.
The most likely scenario is that investors attributed the steep initial rise in credit flows after 1989 to sound
policies
in emerging markets.
Unfortunately, many emerging markets have weak governments that cannot define credible
policies
for financing intervention in such circumstances.
And, like Bush, Trump is yet another Republican president who will assume office despite losing the popular vote, only to pretend that he has a mandate to undertake extremist
policies.
Unhinged budgetary
policies
will induce the US Federal Reserve to normalize interest rates faster.
Meanwhile, his tax
policies
will be of limited benefit to middle-class and working families – and will be more than offset by cutbacks in health care, education, and social programs.
As bad as his administration will be for America’s economy and workers, its
policies
on climate change, human rights, the media, and ensuring peace and security are likely to be no less damaging for everyone else.
The rules of the global economy also remain untouchable, making it nearly impossible to restructure financial and trade
policies
to ensure that they do not result in more poverty, unchecked climate change, and irreversible resource destruction.
Libya’s newfound engagement with the US and the EU represents not only a major shift in its international
policies
and diplomatic posture, but also a major internal reorientation, because the country now wants to develop an economy that is not exclusively based on oil.
As the benefits of globalization became manifest, and the damage wrought by autarkic
policies
also became evident, policymakers in the East began to appreciate that their anti-globalization stance had been a mistake.
So, for 20 years it has seemed to me that Western Europe’s underlying political equilibrium – corporatist bargaining and ample social insurance, on the one hand, and tight monetary policies, on the other – must crack.
But the reality is that steps toward looser monetary
policies
are non-existent – especially with the fledgling European Central Bank anxious to establish its inflation-fighting credibility – and that steps toward structural reforms are half-hearted, hesitant, and small.
I think that Germany would be better off in a decade under more neo-liberal
policies.
Lugo’s government pursued moderate economic and social policies, but did not propose any meaningful land reform.
Among the largest of these politically excluded groups are landless peasants, who demand land reform and rural development
policies.
Indeed, Indonesian women have shown how Sharia can provide a tool for combating misogynist
policies.
Rather than taking over the state, Islamist parties have been forced by the electorate to alter their
policies
to account for Indonesian pluralism.
Germany cannot, however, indulge its obsession with supply-side reforms without also pursuing growth-enhancing
policies.
For starters, Trump’s economic
policies
are likely to produce much higher US interest rates and inflation than financial markets expect.
As Trump launches his policies, however, the Fed is likely to tighten its monetary policy more than it had planned before the inauguration, not less, as the markets still expect.
More important, as Trump’s
policies
boost both real economic activity and inflation, long-term interest rates, which influence the world economy more than the overnight rates set by central banks, are likely to rise steeply.
Elected officials hard-wired misleading projections by excising from current law expensive
policies
that they had every intention of pursuing.
The European Union’s recently released 2030 framework for climate and energy
policies
maintains the focus on domestic
policies
aimed at boosting efficiency and deployment of renewable energy.
Moreover, Germans are not convinced that Keynesian policies, with their focus on boosting aggregate demand, are particularly effective in influencing long-term economic trends, despite their obvious short-term impact on output and employment.
Given that it is less controversial than unconventional monetary policies, and will take longer to produce results, it should be given top priority.
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