Programs
in sentence
3183 examples of Programs in a sentence
A successful program for Jordan could demonstrate the international community’s ability to bring the refugee crisis under control, opening the way to similar
programs
for other frontline states, adjusted on a case-by-case basis, depending on local conditions.
In fact, so far, lack of adequate financing is the main obstacle to implementation of successful
programs
in any of the frontline countries, particularly in Turkey.
Each came with their own programs, their own civil-society organizations, and their own television crews.
This may sound like pie in the sky, but we have already tasted it in Africa, where Sierra Leone’s Agenda for Prosperity 2013-2017 and the Liberia Vision 2030 exemplify the potential of such
programs.
But they should make sure that such
programs
are administered in employees’ interest, because companies that encourage their employees to hold options or to invest directly in the company’s stock are asking them to take on some of the company’s risks.
More generally, they must examine employee ownership
programs
both sympathetically and analytically, in order to suggest ways to hedge the risks they create.
Even at its worst, unemployment in Japan rarely exceeded 4%, owing to a combination of early retirement, social programs, work-sharing, and political pressure on large employers.
In principle, low-income individuals and families could be compensated through lump-sum transfer
programs.
It will also identify better ways to ensure that development aid reaches the poor, taking lessons from successful
programs
such as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.
Unfortunately, a few drops spilled on participants’
programs
could be water’s most meaningful appearance on the summit’s agenda.
No US state provides affordable daycare, early education, and after-school
programs
that take up the caregiving slack.
The Pentagon’s East Asia Strategy Review, which has guided American policy since 1995, offered China integration into the international system through trade and exchange
programs.
These include income distribution programs, special schools in poor sectors that integrate education, cultural and sport facilities, and a recycling system for the 13,000 tons of waste produced daily, thereby creating new working opportunities for street collectors.
Still, while
programs
and summits can offer the world’s developing and least-developed countries a place to start in their push for greater connectivity, more support is needed if we are ever to close the digital divide.
This tendency is reinforced by the rise of cable television, which attracts viewers by means of contentious “infotainment” programs, and Internet bloggers, who engage in fierce polemics with no editorial filter.
The channel canceled its regular programs, and was transformed into a round-the-clock workshop of live news and interviews, switching from one revolution to another.
It also needs to fund well-targeted
programs
to reduce poverty further and ensure universal access to basic education; to improve secondary education, with a view to improving the technical skills of the labor force; and to support efficient research and innovation.
In addition, a range of civil-service reforms are needed to improve flexibility and increase productivity, while health and education
programs
require greater cost effectiveness.
So, beyond offering funding for ameliorative programs, Soros uses his philanthropy to advance a vision of a truly free society governed by democratically accountable leaders.
Fortunately, openly anti-European political
programs
are not the norm, at least not yet.
But they also included workers – both blue- and white-collar – who were among the losers from globalization, but who nonetheless remained loyal, either because they were socially and religiously conservative, or because center-left parties were formally supporters of unions, workers’ rights, and entitlement
programs.
The response from America’s Democratic Party, which has traditionally represented this constituency, was to promise affordable universal health care and more education spending, while also protecting government jobs and entitlement
programs.
However, even elderly Tea Party Republicans, who are typically against big government, defend these
programs
because they view them as a form of property right, paid for when they worked.
The government made a mistake in the past by not raising taxes to finance these
programs
or reducing the benefits that they promised.
Unless the growth of these entitlement
programs
is curbed now, today’s young will pay dearly for that mistake, in the form of higher taxes now and lower benefits when they are old.
Americans never would alter the way entitlement
programs
are funded or education administered without serious study and widespread debate.
HONG KONG – Since the Cold War ended, the West has invested huge amounts of resources in efforts to induce political liberalization in China, including through
programs
to promote the rule of law, civil society, transparency, and government accountability.
China’s “influence operations,” they argue, include cultivating ties with Western politicians, establishing Confucius Institutes around the world to promote Chinese language and culture, expanding the global reach of China’s official propaganda networks, and donations to and exchange
programs
with academic institutions.
If television or radio news
programs
are distorting the truth, pick up the phone and tell them and their advertisers what you think.
Indeed, the recent revelations about National Security Agency surveillance
programs
barely scratch the surface of the issue.
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