Programs
in sentence
3183 examples of Programs in a sentence
As for private-sector actors, the key will be to reward employees with degrees and certifications received through online
programs.
Similarly, the increase in infrastructure spending is likely to be accomplished through tax credits, which will help hedge funds, but not America’s balance sheet: such programs’ long track record shows that they deliver little value for money.
Meanwhile, his tax policies will be of limited benefit to middle-class and working families – and will be more than offset by cutbacks in health care, education, and social
programs.
For all of our lives, my generation has defined success in terms of rising GDP growth: more money in more pockets, more resources for public programs, and more jobs.
And, thanks to a partnership between the state and Islamic scholars stretching back 40 years, Indonesia has one of the most successful family-planning
programs
in the developing world.
Former President George W. Bush’s restrictions on funding for health
programs
that used condoms or other forms of contraception meant that Islamic organizations receiving any funding from the US Agency for International Development were unable to publish material promoting safe-sex and family planning.
Clearly, part of the blame lies with voters who don’t want to hear that budget discipline means cutting
programs
that matter to them, and with politicians who tell voters only what they want to hear.
As soon as he was re-elected, Bush started to propose cuts in popular government programs, but his own party is rejecting those cuts.
A few even get away with maintaining nuclear
programs.
Many policymakers hope that 2010 will bring clarity on the North Korean and Iranian nuclear
programs.
Of course, computer
programs
can now process data derived from patients' symptoms and generate psychiatric diagnoses.
For Brooks, it is that knowing that public
programs
make one’s life easier causes one to vote for non-Republican candidates.
Effective conservation
programs
are based on sound scientific knowledge.
Second, the CBO estimates that the law will add $1.45 trillion to the deficit over the next decade, which could trigger spending cuts to health-insurance
programs
for the elderly, poor, and disabled, such as Medicare and Medicaid.
These
programs
are already some of the government’s largest budget items, accounting for $1 trillion in spending – 26% of the federal budget – in 2016.
Each of the tax law’s injustices – fewer Americans with health coverage, stripped-down public programs, lower incomes for the poor, less access to substance-abuse treatment – is unambiguously bad for health outcomes.
But if seniors are to occupy high-quality jobs in the new economy, they need access to more effective lifelong learning
programs
that enable them to upgrade their skills continuously in response to technological change.
It is not only seniors who need access to upgraded education and training
programs.
These
programs
develop what the American journalist Edward R. Murrow once called the crucial “last three feet” – face-to-face communications, with the enhanced credibility that reciprocity creates.
Quick or easy Senate approval of the New START arms-control treaty is highly unlikely, given stated concerns about verification and the protection of US missile-defense programs; instead, we can expect delays and, possibly, attempts to amend what the two governments already agreed upon.
We need to concentrate on building nutrition-sensitive agriculture
programs
that include small-scale farmers, households, women, and children.
Responsibility for launching
programs
to distribute food more equitably would also fall to governments.
Moreover, the declaration highlights two issues that receive little attention: the need to include girls in the planning and implementation of
programs
and services, and the need to collect and analyze more data on girls and women, to gain a deeper understanding of their experiences and needs.
A remarkable observation supports this analogy: viruses behave like individual pieces of programs, using the cell as the machine needed to make them multiply and subsequently propagate (often by destroying the machine).
It has been shown that, the outcome of some computer
programs
is at once entirely deterministic, innovative, and unpredictable.
Such sentiments have guided Russia-relevant
programs
for decades – in both turbulent and prosperous times.
For example, such foundations supported struggling Russian universities after the Soviet Union’s collapse, helping them to regain their status while rebuilding academic
programs
in all disciplines.
And they have funded
programs
aimed at creating and implementing effective policies to secure Russia’s vast nuclear arsenal at a time when the country’s ability to do so was dangerously weak.
The appeal of a UBI is rooted in three key features: it provides a basic social “floor” to all citizens; it lets people choose how to use that support; and it could help to streamline the bureaucracy on which many social-support
programs
depend.
Already, various local social
programs
in Latin America contain elements of the UBI idea, though they are targeted at the poor and usually conditional on certain behavior, such as having children regularly attend school.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Countries
Government
Social
Other
Should
Which
Would
Education
Health
Public
Could
Governments
People
Economic
Support
Through
Spending
Training
About