Policymakers
in sentence
3364 examples of Policymakers in a sentence
Undertaken by politicians, an audit might be viewed as an opportunity to score political points or steer policy in self-serving directions, with delicate information leaked in order to pressure
policymakers.
Many emerging-market
policymakers
view accumulation of foreign-exchange reserves during the 2000’s as having insured their countries against exchange-rate volatility and loss of export competitiveness.
Not surprisingly, given their decades of experience with the management and mismanagement of capital flows, emerging-market
policymakers
have been watching the IMF’s “rethink” on these issues very closely.
In the decade since the last crisis, Argentine
policymakers
have broken almost every rule in the economic-policy playbook.
But policymakers’ job is to manage risks, and those they are facing today are not the usual ones.
German
policymakers
have discounted the rise of extremism in relatively small countries such as Hungary and Greece.
If
policymakers
raise interest rates too briskly, the result will be recession.
With the United Nations sustainable development agenda ambitiously targeting universal access to energy by 2030,
policymakers
are paying more attention to electrification, and development-finance institutions and partners are making more funding available.
Similarly, the more that recovery and sustained growth strengthen banks’ balance sheets, the less urgency
policymakers
feel to address structural shortcomings, such as the implicit guarantees enjoyed by state banks and municipal savings banks in Germany, and the problems of family-controlled banks like Banco Espirito Santo in Portugal.
But Spanish
policymakers
and business leaders appeared to grasp the nature of the pre-crisis economic imbalances – and the importance of the tradable sector as a recovery engine.
Now that the Chinese prefer to invest that money in raw materials in Africa and elsewhere, they have aroused the full ire of American
policymakers.
We don’t have the answers to these questions, in part because the consequences will depend on what actions
policymakers
take.
Policymakers
need to shed received wisdom and forget useless dichotomies such as “markets versus government” or “nation-state versus globalization.”
Indeed, the Fed decided to delay raising interest rates partly because US
policymakers
expect dollar appreciation, by lowering import prices, to undermine their ability to meet their 2% inflation target.
American
policymakers
expended considerable effort devising ways to support the pound, because they knew that the same factors that made the pound vulnerable also threatened the dollar.
What Chinese
policymakers
don’t seem to recognize is that such interventions carry serious long-term costs.
For example, when
policymakers
promise to act if certain risks arise, markets inevitably discount the impact of such risks.
And, while rising global concern about income inequality has put some wind in Francis’s sails, his agenda has yet to make an impact on Catholic
policymakers
like Republican US Congressmen Paul Ryan and John Boehner or powerful figures in the Church.
The biggest development successes in recent years have been in places like China and Vietnam, where Western economic ideas, to the extent that they were considered at all, lost out to more practically oriented
policymakers.
One clear lesson is that we need better rules of engagement between economic researchers and
policymakers.
In both 2008 and 2012, Copenhagen Consensus projects focusing on global development priorities concluded that
policymakers
and philanthropists should make fighting malnourishment a top priority.
But the new dispute over Greece has convinced many
policymakers
of the necessity to return to the drawing board.
But unless its
policymakers
act soon, the US could find itself in the same unhappy condition as my own country, France.
In this respect, developing countries’ experience holds potentially important lessons for
policymakers
and various stakeholders in advanced economies.
But I would remind them of the second lesson from developing countries’ experience: non-inclusive growth patterns undermine trust and eventually governance, in turn undercutting policymakers’ ability to sustain policies and strategies that support high growth.
They also must consult more closely with educators and
policymakers
– discussions that should be informed by labor-market information, performance reviews, and the availability of employment services.
Policymakers
were too focused on Vietnam to contemplate action in another theater.
The Great BacklashNEW YORK – In the immediate aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, policymakers’ success in preventing the Great Recession from turning into Great Depression II held in check demands for protectionist and inward-looking measures.
In other words, interest rates have been low, and remain low, because
policymakers
have gone to great lengths to keep them there.
COLORADO SPRINGS – Every day,
policymakers
around the world face a dizzying array of choices.
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