Policies
in sentence
9025 examples of Policies in a sentence
Less than one week before Papandreou dropped his bombshell, eurozone leaders had spoken unequivocally: “The introduction of the European Semester has fundamentally changed the way our fiscal and economic
policies
are coordinated at European level, with co-ordination at EU level now taking place before national decisions are taken.”
Migration’s Private-Sector Problem-SolversLONDON – As the Mediterranean migrant crisis has escalated over the past year, the spotlight has been on national governments’ policies, some of which have been generous, others callous.
Douglas MacArthur's partially successful
policies
in Japan after the Second World War offer some guidance.
Such
policies
would mirror those followed by Napoleon III in France in the 1850's.
Success in this balancing act requires leadership, transparent policies, and good communication.
As a result, the eurozone’s fiscally sound countries are being asked repeatedly to compromise their prudent
policies
in order to finance endless bailouts.
Europe’s leaders must stop treating the eurozone as a homogeneous entity, imposing one-size-fits-all
policies
on vastly different countries.
Moreover, after the financial crisis erupted, central banks were increasingly compelled to depart from inflation targeting, and to implement myriad unconventional monetary
policies
in order to ameliorate the consequences of the crash and facilitate economic recovery.
(By contrast, fiscal and exchange-rate
policies
rarely imply comparable temporal trade-offs, and thus are difficult to exploit for political gain.)
The automatic exchange of financial information based on the OECD’s Common Reporting Standard has allowed governments to collect close to €85 billion ($99 billion) in additional tax revenue worldwide; this money can help fund better social
policies.
And thanks to the OECD’s Program for International Student Assessment, more than 70 countries are making better-informed decisions about education
policies
for their children.
Disappointingly, the spirit manifested by Britons in that era has not been reflected in the
policies
of British Prime Minister David Cameron – or those of many of his European counterparts.
As a result, politicians, particularly in Europe, have no choice but to favor inclusive growth
policies
and scrutinize the potential impact that a given policy could have on the income distribution.
Human capital – not natural resources, production capacity, or financial reserves – should constitute the foundation of Russian and European development
policies.
This is partly because much of world trade and finance is indexed to the dollar, leading many countries to try to mimic Fed
policies
to stabilize their exchange rates.
A new surge of support for protectionist
policies
would require a coalition of powerful interest groups to organize a campaign aimed at changing the status quo.
An effective reform strategy would have to balance the need for budget restraint and macroeconomic stability with growth-enhancing
policies.
And, unlike business-friendly conservatives, centrists do not think that market competition arises from thin air: it must be fostered through potent anti-monopoly
policies.
Radical
policies
do not pay; but radical truthfulness does.
Monti now has the unique opportunity to take another page out of the Nordic playbook by turning his set of centrist
policies
into a collective narrative of political responsibility.
So, despite the rise in the household saving rate, unless federal government
policies
change to shrink America’s future budget deficits, the US will continue to be dependent on capital inflows from the rest of the world.
Nothing similar has happened in Asia, and issues dating back to the 1930’s and 1940’s remain raw, a problem exacerbated by biased textbooks and government
policies.
They point to the negative results of China’s more assertive
policies
since the economic crisis of 2008.
Indeed, China’s
policies
have damaged its relations with nearly all of its neighbors.
The Council of Economic Advisers, whose members write the president’s report, surmise that structural changes – including stronger incentives for efficiency by hospitals and providers, more cost-sharing in insurance policies, and the substitution of generic drugs for branded drugs – explain most of the deceleration in per capita spending growth.
Based on current policies, the government forecasts that Medicare spending per beneficiary will grow at an average annual rate of 4.3% and will rise to 6.7% of GDP over the next 75 years.
Netanyahu’s version of sumud is evident in his
policies
and rhetoric, which focus on Israel’s legitimacy, necessity, and permanence.
Despite considerable Israeli disgust with Netanyahu’s party, allies, and policies, no credible rival exists.
Talmon criticized the Israeli right’s belief that one major “event”would radically and permanently change the situation in Israel’s favor, and he repudiated the “religious sanction” used to justify unrealistic
policies
in the Occupied Territories.
Argentina used to have a gas industry, but it was decimated by years of misguided government
policies.
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