Proposed
in sentence
2143 examples of Proposed in a sentence
In early October, a razor-thin majority of voters rejected Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos’s
proposed
peace deal with the guerrillas.
What, then, would the
proposed
dialogue between the US and these states achieve other than continue to empower their corrupt yet ambitious regimes?
That is all the more true when the rhetoric in question includes promises that would harm everyone involved, as Trump’s
proposed
tariffs would.
The EU’s talks with Ukraine on a
proposed
Association Agreement, for example, provide some leverage, which the EU should not hesitate to use.
For genuine and long-term stability, Zhao
proposed
reforms that ultimately aimed at the legalization and systemization of democracy.
Although the short-term practical objectives of Zhao’s political reforms were limited by the circumstances in which they were proposed, the measures all aimed at containing Communist Party power and represented a concrete step toward returning, peacefully, power to China’s people.
One such issue was the so-called Free-Trade Area of the Americas, which was
proposed
by former US President George H.W. Bush in 1990, and then collapsed at the Mar del Plata summit in Argentina in 2005.
These steps would precede concrete legal and constitutional reforms, such as those
proposed
by Hizb al ghad.
Though US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
proposed
compensation to the victims of abuse at American military hands, it is hard to see this offer as expressing either guilt or shame.
As Tony Atkinson points out in his article “The Strange Disappearance of Welfare Economics,” economic analysis must take into account how
proposed
policies help people to thrive.
Taking his cue from Paul Volcker, a former chairman of the US Federal Reserve, President Barack Obama has
proposed
a modern form of Glass-Steagall.
Such
proposed
solutions assume that regulators will be able to identify excess risks, prevent banks from manipulating the regulations, resist political pressure to leave the banks alone, and impose controversial corrective measures “that will be too complicated to defend in public.”
As the Nobel laureate economist Gary Becker
proposed
in A Treatise on the Family, it influenced who would gain an education and develop professional skills.
That concern is reinforced by the dramatic cuts to the US State Department budget, and to US funding for the United Nations, that Trump has
proposed.
On May 22, the Senate avoided it, by narrowly defeating – 51 to 48 – a
proposed
“currency manipulation” amendment to a bill that gives Obama so-called “fast-track” authority to negotiate the TPP.
For example, some have
proposed
including the provision of employment for all adults in the Millennium Development Goals’ successor framework, which is to be unveiled this year.
Accordingly, the US has
proposed
that, rather than pledging “no first use” of cyber weapons, countries should pledge not to use cyber weapons against civilian facilities in peacetime.
Of course, whether America can implement the available solutions is uncertain; several commissions have
proposed
feasible plans to change America’s debt trajectory by raising taxes and cutting expenditures, but feasibility is no guarantee that they will be adopted.
But the
proposed
US-India accord is attracting notice for a second, and far more controversial, reason: concern that it could weaken, rather than advance, efforts to resist the further worldwide spread of nuclear weapons.
Where the critics of the
proposed
US-India accord are wrong is in charging that such a double standard is wrong when it comes to India because it opens the way for countries such as North Korea and Iran to develop nuclear weapons.
Indeed, if there is a danger in the
proposed
US-India accord, it is the possibility that either North Korea or Iran might conclude that it is only a matter of time before the world comes to accept their nuclear status.
The Sum of All Brexit FearsLONDON – Day after day, week after week, most British citizens think that the turmoil over their country’s
proposed
exit from the European Union cannot get any worse.
But a treaty change would require engaging the European public – and, in several member states, submitting the
proposed
revisions to popular referenda.
Indeed, to expect such results by the
proposed
four-month deadline is highly implausible.
And though the European Commission’s
proposed
2020-2027 budget would reduce such funding, it would allow member states to continue spending taxpayers’ money on fossil-fuel production.
While Qureshi calls for economic growth to be “inclusive,” most of the policies he recommends fit more with the failed Washington Consensus than with the new directions
proposed
by resurgent progressive economists.
“America first” – whether it comes at the expense of China or via the so-called border-tax equalization that appears to be a central feature of
proposed
corporate tax reforms – will unwind many of the efficiencies of global supply chains that hold down consumer-goods prices in the US (think Wal-Mart).
The impact would be even greater if new investment targeted areas with the largest number of displaced persons and migrants-in-waiting, as
proposed
by a new “Commission on Forced Displacement”.
The government-controlled national television station recently broadcast an illegally taped private phone conversation in which I
proposed
a study to explore how to rescue the Venezuelan economy by leveraging the support of the international community.
The
proposed
Global Compact for Migration goes beyond these factors, and notes that climate change is among the “adverse drivers and structural factors that compel people to leave their country of origin.”
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