Proposed
in sentence
2143 examples of Proposed in a sentence
Before we get to that wager, it is worth considering other
proposed
explanations for the market rally.
The Strategic Imperative of TTIPBRUSSELS – As negotiations between the European Union and the United States over the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) move toward a final agreement, opponents of the
proposed
pact are becoming more vocal.
In considering the significance of the
proposed
treaty, it is important to remember that European integration began with the creation of a common market for coal and steel.
In August 1989, I
proposed
in the Polish Diet a draft resolution apologizing to the Czechs and Slovaks for Polish involvement in the 1968 invasion.
Similarly, the
proposed
cuts in payments to providers of services to Medicare patients are unlikely to receive the necessary Congressional support in future years, especially if it turns out that doing so would reduce the volume of services, rather than just providers’ incomes.
And how could that cost be financed if the
proposed
taxes on existing health policies and the reductions in Medicare outlays have already been used?
Nevertheless, the extent of US cooperation with the ICC has exceeded even the constructive role that the Obama administration had
proposed.
Since emissions from the developing countries are on the whole lower than those of the developed world – and will need to continue to rise in the short-term as they maintain economic growth and address poverty – it has been
proposed
that developed countries cut emissions by at least 80% relative to 1990 by 2050, with major steps towards this goal over the next decade.
Unfortunately, the Obama administration’s
proposed
approach to ending “too big to fail” – now taken up by the US Congress – will not work.
Pediatricians wrestled with this conundrum until the 1970’s, when it was
proposed
that shaking might induce rotational forces and cause the “triad” of symptoms without bruises or fractures.
But the broad range of
proposed
schemes to bolster resources for development assistance raises hard questions about the appropriate balance between objective needs and sound and effective financing.
Finally, the
proposed
“better use” of the IMF’s gold holdings to finance the costs of debt relief seeks to raise up to $8 billion.
One cause often
proposed
for this damaging phenomenon is the emphasis that many African cultures place on mutual respect.
With this in mind, the most obvious point about the recent summit is that the “fiscal stability union” that it
proposed
is nothing of the sort.
This summit should have
proposed
institutional changes to avert such a scenario.
Toward this end, the Education Commission – which includes leaders from government, academia, business, and economics – just published a roadmap and a
proposed
global budget to provide universal, high-quality primary and secondary education.
As the government
proposed
to introduce an anti-subversion law and strengthened its control over the civil service, they became guarded in what they said and tightlipped about mentioning the pressures from above.
The ideas
proposed
in the commission’s report include providing training and mentors for prospective entrepreneurs and startups, creating “ecosystems” of supporting infrastructure, and reducing regulatory barriers.
Constitutions works only if all sides have an interest in operating within the
proposed
framework – and this obviously is not the case in Iraq.
It is too late to agree on issuing SDRs at the upcoming G-20 meeting, but if it were
proposed
by President Barack Obama and endorsed in principle by the majority of participants, it would be sufficient to give heart to the markets and make the meeting a resounding success.
In Macron’s
proposed
scheme, each euro transferred from a Northern to a Southern European country would reduce the Target claims and liabilities by one euro.
In 1972, Yale University economists William Nordhaus and James Tobin
proposed
a new framework, the “measure of economic welfare” (MEW), to account for sundry unpaid activities.
The idea of permanently raising inflation targets to 4% was first
proposed
in an interesting and insightful paper led by IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard, and has been endorsed by a number of other academics, including, most recently, Paul Krugman.
When Blanchard first
proposed
his idea, I was intrigued but skeptical.
In my 2003 book The New Financial Order, I
proposed
that such units be called “baskets,” since a consumer price index is the price of a representative market basket of goods and services.
To be sure, denationalization policies have been popular; even Hollande’s
proposed
constitutional reform was supported by 80% of the French public at one point.
Significantly, France has
proposed
that all five permanent members of the Security Council renounce use of the veto in cases of alleged mass atrocities.
The
proposed
defense treaty was also to be buttressed by plans for a European political community whose main features were to be defined by a constitutional commission made up of members of national parliaments.
And now, with the US House of Representatives having rejected the Bush administration’s
proposed
$700 billion bailout plan, it is also obvious that there is no consensus on how to fix it.
To be sure, the rescue plan that was just defeated was far better than what the Bush administration originally
proposed.
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