Predicted
in sentence
706 examples of Predicted in a sentence
At the beginning of the campaign, many observers
predicted
that Iraq would be the major issue in 2008.
In Vietnam, for example, the share of jobs at risk falls from the ILO’s
predicted
70% to just 15% when the country’s large informal economy is taken into account.
The EU will soon collapse, he predicted, with a succession of countries following the United Kingdom out.
Clearly, the supposed experts who
predicted
the imminent disintegration of the eurozone have been proved wrong.
Whether this unites the oligarchs, or divides them, and whether it forces them to take their money out of Russia, or bring it back home, cannot be
predicted.
China, Brazil, and India have not decoupled from their customers in Europe and North America, and so are slowing, though a relatively soft landing is likely if Europe’s recession is as short and mild as
predicted.
But the outbreak appears to have ended less like the rogue wild boar that WHO bureaucrats
predicted
and more like a roasted pork tenderloin with apples and sage.
All of this was predictable – and in fact was
predicted.
The overall budget deficit is still
predicted
to be 4.1% of Greece’s GDP in 2013 – a substantial improvement compared to 2010 but still far from fiscal balance.
Trump’s escalation of the trade war over the course of 2018 appears to have had the effect on the dollar
predicted
by economic theory.
Indeed, the US Department of Labor recently
predicted
that the labor force will grow by only 8% between 2008 and 2018, down from 12% in the previous ten years.
For all of these reasons, technology policy has taken center stage, as I
predicted
it would exactly one year ago.
Everything happening there was both predictable and predicted: a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran, increasing sectarianism and ethnic segregation, the polarization of extremes and the silencing of moderates, de-stabilization of neighboring countries, infiltration by terrorist groups, and a bloodbath from which the country could take decades to recover.
Central banks (not to mention lawmakers), with their strong attachment to neo-Keynesian theory, are ignoring a major lesson from decades of monetary-policy experimentation: the impact of monetary policy cannot be
predicted
with a high degree of certainty or accuracy.
Even the plea of one of central banker that “no one could have
predicted
the problems” moved few in the audience – perhaps because several people sitting there had, like me, explicitly warned about the impending problem in previous years.
The MGI also finds that, compared to pre-crisis trends, portfolio-debt inflows to emerging markets were larger than
predicted
between 2009 and 2012.
When opening a new building at the London School of Economics, the Queen of England asked why no one had
predicted
the crisis.
Overdosing on Heterodoxy Can Kill YouCAMBRIDGE – Ever since the 2008 financial crisis, it has been common to chastise economists for not having
predicted
the disaster, for having offered the wrong prescriptions to prevent it, or for having failed to fix it after it happened.
Fifteen months ago, in a submission to the Economic Affairs Committee of the House of Lords, I
predicted
that all existing UK projects except Thanet Offshore Wind would be abandoned or postponed unless Parliament radically altered its Renewable Obligation Certificates (ROC) scheme.
But change of this order of magnitude is highly contentious, and its path and outcome cannot be easily
predicted
or steered, no matter how determined the governmental leadership is.
And, as could have been predicted, they have not been fully effective.
In the early 1990’s, nobody
predicted
that China’s economy would become the world’s second largest within 20 years.
But her humiliating defeat could have been
predicted
before the campaign had even begun.
Others spoke out as well, and the futures markets quickly
predicted
another 25-basis-point rate hike in March.
The dismantling of the EU’s internal borders boosted each country’s market size and brought about the
predicted
economies of scale.
A century before that, in a bid to lift the spirits of his friend Pyotr Chaadayev, a philosopher who was declared mad for his criticism of Czar Nicholas I, the poet Alexander Pushkin
predicted
the advent of better times, when “Russia will start from her sleep.”
When I
predicted
Hamas’s victory before the election, Fatah’s campaign manager replied, “Everyone will vote for Abbas and everything will be all right.”
Cynics recall that a European recovery was supposed to take hold as early as the fourth quarter of 2010, and that every International Monetary Fund projection since then has
predicted
recovery “by the end of the year.”
None
predicted
the crisis; and in very few of these economies has a semblance of full employment been restored.
That downturn is now upon us, but the results have been precisely the opposite of what Friedman
predicted.
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