Policies
in sentence
9025 examples of Policies in a sentence
Indeed, the global economy has become so interconnected, and world markets so powerful, that there appears to be little scope for national
policies
to disrupt hyper-mobile capital flows.
At the outset, Brazil’s
policies
attracted entrepreneurs of all sorts.
By the 1990’s, the major subsidies and
policies
were abolished, and the industry was deregulated.
Brazil’s experience offers three important lessons for nations implementing renewable energy initiatives: (1) government
policies
must be consistent, simple, and long-lasting, providing assurance to would-be entrepreneurs that they can invest for the long haul; (2) picking winners, the familiar weakness of overenthusiastic bureaucrats, must be kept to a minimum; and (3) the state must have the discipline to dismantle subsidies when the need for them has passed.
Of course, the national average is much lower (about one-half), as overall productivity is much lower, and the Chinese authorities have to calibrate
policies
for their entire vast country.
Tax cuts and interest-rate normalization, I expected, would shift the mix toward looser fiscal and tighter monetary policies, the combination that drove up the dollar in the Reagan-Volcker years.
Investors have no way to forecast the impact of policies, because
policies
thought to be headed one way suddenly veer in the opposite direction.
While this new strain of global pressures on US inflation reflects the impact of aggressive trade
policies
on GVCs, the domestic pressures stem from a more familiar source: an extremely tight labor market.
And, regardless of whether the ECB’s asset purchase program (APP) has been effective from a real economy perspective, its
policies
have had a clear impact on domestic financial conditions and international financial flows.
Given that extraordinarily loose monetary
policies
are causing unprecedented – but predictable – distortions in German and eurozone financial accounts, it seems ill-advised to suggest that German fiscal policy also be loosened to address the current-account imbalance.
The impact was greater in countries that had a history of structural fiscal problems, maintained loose fiscal policies, and ignored fiscal reforms during the boom years.
More problematic, he has occasionally dissented publicly from Leung’s various misguided
policies.
But now, China’s rulers, through Leung, are pushing potentially disastrous
policies
aimed, in Chinese Communist Party parlance, at “de-colonizing” Hong Kong.
With the relentless increase in electricity subsidies, which are squeezing the energy sector, it is difficult to devise effective
policies
to stem over-pumping.
Coordinating the various sectors’
policies
effectively will be difficult, to say the least.
With these actions, Russia has diminished the sense of invincibility that, since the end of the Cold War, has driven the West to pursue
policies
that provoked international conflict and undermined its own moral authority and soft power.
Fortunately, China is still enough of a planned economy that officials can mobilize
policies
to cushion the impact.
Turkey’s Hot-Money ProblemNEW YORK – The ongoing financial volatility in emerging economies is fueling debate about whether the so-called “Fragile Five” – Brazil, India, Indonesia, South Africa, and Turkey – should be viewed as victims of advanced countries’ monetary
policies
or victims of their own excessive integration into global financial markets.
Although all of the Fragile Five – identified based on their twin fiscal and current-account deficits, which make them particularly vulnerable to capital-flow volatility – have adopted some macroprudential measures since the global financial crisis, the mix of such policies, and their outcomes, has varied substantially.
Well aware of this “danger,” China is implementing five
policies.
Signs of decline in China’s economy, which has racked up double-digit growth for decades, would affect all of its Taiwan
policies.
It is the “moderates” who must now adapt their
policies.
Their
policies
are about more than spreading terror and revolution; they are about promoting negotiable interests.
Let’s give the other party a chance, even if its
policies
are not exactly what conservatives may like.
Sadly, the Republican Party has been hijacked during the Bush years by sloganeers using code phrases like “illegal immigration” and “protecting the middle class” to mask their racism, and “economic incentive effects” to justify tax
policies
that are blatantly tilted to the rich.
Reagan understood that, and it is one of the reasons he was a great and beloved president, even if some of his
policies
were flawed.
As Hillary Clinton, Obama’s rapidly fading rival for the Democratic nomination is finding out to her dismay,
policies
can be an overrated commodity in presidential elections that really matter.
But there is a third, more competitive option: a “blue” economy driven by business-level innovation, rather than top-down
policies.
Some traditional policies, like the CAP, will be unsustainable in an enlarged EU.
Last week Pascal Lamy, a French Socialist European Commissioner, called for a re-think of many French European
policies.
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