Potential
in sentence
6046 examples of Potential in a sentence
One of the most significant areas of
potential
cooperation has not yet received sufficient attention: Canadian energy exports to Europe.
The lower marginal tax rates induced individuals to work more and to receive more of their
potential
income in taxable cash rather than in fringe benefits and other forms of compensation that are not subject to tax.
The region’s countries clearly have vulnerabilities that weaken their individual and collective efforts to combat
potential
foreign terrorist activities.
US President Barack Obama recognizes this potential, and has promoted increased strategic cooperation between South Korea and Japan in order to underpin a stronger trilateral security alliance with the US that can balance a rising China.
First, growth
potential
can’t be realized without sufficient human capital.
And, in the process of freeing people from the burden of disease, we will unlock immeasurable human
potential.
Other
potential
candidates believe that the currently vacant seat on the Constitutional Court has been earmarked for Ray Zondo, who, as acting judge, has already been sitting on the tribunal for an extended period.
Many interviewees were dealt with in a perfunctory manner, with extraordinarily short interviews – ten minutes – which caused at least one
potential
Constitutional Court candidate to decline nomination shortly before the latest deadline for nominations to the court (the previous deadline had to be extended, owing to a lack of qualified applicants).
Other
potential
nominees say bluntly that they do not want to be members of a court led by Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, citing “over-promotion” of those with modest credentials and professional experience at the expense of more qualified candidates.
The only
potential
sticking point in India is the perception that it is surrendering its territory.
The only
potential
change is that some residents of the Indian enclaves may migrate to India after the settlement, if they so choose.
Roughly 80% of China’s energy imports pass through that
potential
chokepoint, which is mostly policed by the US Navy.
These infrastructure investments clearly hold the
potential
to bind Asia closer together than ever before.
After centuries of isolation and colonial slumber, the region is now awake to the
potential
benefits of greater unity.
Its policymakers deny the eurozone’s crisis-ridden countries a more active fiscal policy; refuse to support a European investment agenda to generate demand and growth; have declared a fiscal surplus, rather than faster
potential
growth, as their primary domestic goal; and have begun turning against the European Central Bank (ECB) in the struggle against deflation and a credit crunch.
And this policy divergence suggests a second
potential
shock for which financial markets seem unprepared.
The US government’s misguided move from
potential
mediator and problem solver to active backer of the Syrian insurrection was, predictably, a terrible mistake.
Public infrastructure investment can serve as the engine of that growth, boosting both short-term demand and long-term
potential
output.
Syriza does not share this outlook; and, indeed, Tsipras did not seek out To Potami, which received 6% of the vote, as a
potential
coalition partner.
China’s Untapped Growth PotentialSHANGHAI – China’s economic slowdown, from a nearly 10% annual output gain in 2007 to below 8% today, has fueled widespread speculation about the economy’s growth
potential.
Whereas short-term demand largely dictates an economy’s real growth rate, its
potential
growth rate is determined on the supply side.
This correlation is reinforced by the convergence hypothesis – the benchmark theory for estimating an economy’s
potential
growth rate – which states that a rapidly growing developing economy’s real growth rate will slow when it reaches a certain share of the per capita capital stock and income of an advanced economy.
Unlike Keynesians, who focus on demand shocks, followers of the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter view cost shocks as important
potential
catalysts for structural reform and industrial upgrading – both of which are needed to avoid falling into a low-growth rut in the long term.
If it fails to take advantage of the opportunity provided by the cost shock and economic slowdown to implement the necessary structural reforms, China’s
potential
growth rate, as dictated by TFP, will never rebound fully.
Such efforts would go a long way toward increasing China’s
potential
growth rate.
Indeed, considering that China’s per capita income amounts to only about 10-20% of that of the US, with massive regional differentials within China, its growth potential, as dictated by the convergence hypothesis, is far from tapped.
But the degree to which it can fulfill this
potential
in the coming decades will depend largely on its TFP prospects.
In light of the
potential
for a new climate of political openness in Muslim-majority countries, these encounters may be more possible than ever before.
But we should not be complacent about the
potential
for politicization in the West.
In China’s relations with all of them, the
potential
use of military force was and remains an important factor.
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