Qualified
in sentence
398 examples of Qualified in a sentence
If private firms, media, and civil-society organizations identify specific problems and call publicly for change, their governments will feel pressure to take the steps needed to produce accurate, unbiased data – for example, by enhancing the autonomy of national statistical offices or providing sufficient funds to hire more
qualified
personnel.
None of this would matter if Somalia had
qualified
for debt reduction.
(Eritrea and Sudan have also not qualified, for similar reasons).
They now base their legitimacy on the notion that the Party, which rose to power as the nation fought foreign domination, is uniquely
qualified
to keep China from being bullied in a hostile international arena, and that only they can provide the stable environment needed for growth.
But, while its work is carried out under the normal
qualified
majority voting system, the 17 eurozone countries will have a single supervisor, so will have a block vote.
Many are highly
qualified
professionals working in finance, consulting, academia, architecture, or law.
Towards the end of the 1990's, the large EU countries encouraged employment of less
qualified
workers through temporary work contracts.
But all of America’s colleges and universities put together will produce only 40,000
qualified
graduates.
In Brazil, the world’s sixth-largest economy, more than 40% of businesses cannot find
qualified
staff.
Observers today tend to forget that, until the early 1980’s, Spain
qualified
as a developing country, according to World Bank standards.
And, five years after the largest financial crisis in almost 80 years, one can count the number of properly
qualified
board members – across all megabanks – on the fingers of one hand.
The surgery is often carried out by tattooists and sometimes veterinarians, because
qualified
physicians and surgeons are reluctant to operate on healthy people.
By neglecting to seek
qualified
sources to offset their understandable lack of expertise, journalists produce imprecise – even untrue – reports, and thus fail to guide public debate in a constructive direction.
Throughout Asia, a significant share of workers feel they are over- or under-educated for their jobs, while employers often lament a lack of
qualified
graduates.
Add to that the fact that Egypt had not
qualified
for a World Cup final since 1990, and expectations ended up far exceeding what the team could realistically achieve in the tournament.
Some
qualified
voters didn't get their bar codes; others feared that employers might use them to learn how they voted.
Even the experiment with electronic voting machines was a
qualified
success.
Some American civil rights lawyers, out of natural deference to the United States Constitution’s First Amendment were, however, reluctant to sign up to this principle unless it was
qualified
by a reference to the threat of “imminent” violence.
But, in some ways, the easy part is to state the case for the obvious: the Bank requires a new selection process that will enable it to choose the most
qualified
person, regardless of nationality.
But national governments remain reluctant to delegate authority: in November 2004, the European Council accepted
qualified
majority voting on measures concerning illegal migration, but left restrictions on legal migration subject to unanimity rules, as if legal and illegal migration were not merely two sides of the same coin.
The EU overcame national biases to establish the Single Market by instituting a process of legally binding
qualified
majority voting, whereby individual member states could be outvoted on specific regulations.
A place awarded to a less-qualified princeling is a place denied to a more
qualified
applicant.
Defenders of this practice insist that princelings are well educated and highly
qualified.
As a result, firms see inadequate demand for their products, and a shortage of
qualified
workers to staff their assembly lines.
With access to
qualified
midwives, many of their lives could be saved.
Qualified
foreign investors, having gained access to the Saudi market in 2015, still account for only 4% of the market’s overall capitalization today.
For capital and big business, EU membership is an economic imperative, offering access to 500 million consumers and reserves of cheap,
qualified
labor.
US President Donald Trump has not only largely spared the Federal Reserve the not-so-tender mercies of his wee-hour tweets; he has also nominated highly
qualified
individuals to fill Fed vacancies.
And it will be particularly embarrassing for Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, who argued that whatever distaste her conservative coalition colleagues had for the former Labor leader, it was wrong to stop a prominent Australian from seeking a position for which he was regarded internationally as manifestly
qualified.
In 2018, initiatives for democratic reforms – including redistricting, stricter ethics standards, and broader voting rights – are in the process of being
qualified
across the country.
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