Prediction
in sentence
273 examples of Prediction in a sentence
I myself would not venture such a
prediction.
For all these reasons, the declaration of a pandemic must not be a
prediction
but rather a kind of real-time snapshot.
Trump may have been issuing a threat and establishing an official red line through his favorite means of communication; he also might merely have been making a prediction, and betting against North Korea’s technical prowess.
His
prediction
flies in the face of the judgment of many professional forecasters, including on Wall Street and at the Federal Reserve, who expect that the US will be lucky to achieve even 2% growth.
Any reader who went beyond the headlines soon discovered that the
prediction
of a zero budget deficit was in fact misleading.
Behind this
prediction
is a widely shared assessment that the trends in Afghanistan (unlike in Iraq) are negative, and that the US must strengthen its military presence there and revise its strategy if the Taliban are not to gain the upper hand.
As I acknowledged at the time, that
prediction
certainly had merit; nonetheless, I persisted in contending that the tribunal could eventually bring to justice many of those most responsible.
But, to capitalize fully on these technologies, organizations must redefine human tasks as
prediction
tasks, which are more suited to these algorithms’ strengths.
Since Trump’s election victory, one popular
prediction
is that the world will revert to nineteenth-century spheres of influence, with major players such as the US, Russia, China, and, yes, Germany, each dominating their respective domains within an increasingly balkanized international system.
It was precisely at that time, however, that the HO-SS trade theory’s
prediction
that free trade would hurt lower-skill workers in rich countries apparently began to materialize.
It is a safe prediction, given that Asia is already home to nearly 60% of the world’s population and accounts for roughly 25% of global economic output.
He claims that the pickup in UK GDP growth in 2013 – nearly three years after Osborne’s austerity budget of June 2010 – refutes my
prediction.
Every
prediction
in economics is conditional on some things staying the same.
If he took the trouble to read what I said in November 2010, he would see that my
prediction
was conditional on existing policies.
The Changing Geopolitics of EnergyTOKYO – In 2008, when the United States’ National Intelligence Council (NIC) published its volume Global Trends 2025, a key
prediction
was tighter energy competition.
Both technology and politics could of course upend this
prediction.
He has also issued unnerving military pronouncements, like an April
prediction
of a possible “major, major conflict” on the peninsula.
By and large, that
prediction
has proven to be correct.
Stiglitz and I agree that Alvin Hansen’s
prediction
was not borne out after World War II because of a combination of expansionary policy and structural changes in the economy.
A month ago, any
prediction
uttered with such certainty would have sounded imprudent, if not foolish.
The data on global debt are certainly correct, but any
prediction
that we draw from them is likely to be overwrought, owing to our own hindsight bias.
But, in pseudo-science, you never acknowledge that a
prediction
was wrong and thus that the model might be defective.
For the moment, the return of manufacturing to rich countries remains a prediction, not an outcome.
But any reasonable analysis of the current PRI does not support that prediction, and reveals it to be based on little more than wishful thinking.
Alas, that
prediction
has now been fulfilled.
Among the expected findings is a
prediction
that by 2050, nearly 90% of global poverty will be concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa, and two-thirds of the world’s poorest people will live in just ten countries.
People remain convinced that next year, or maybe the year after, the
prediction
will come true.
But any
prediction
based on recurring patterns of behavior will fail when something genuinely new happens.
Whenever an apocalyptic
prediction
fizzles, the doomsayers remain strangely silent – until the next opportunity to capture the public’s imagination.
Today, geneticists have joined the
prediction
business.
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