Raises
in sentence
773 examples of Raises in a sentence
But it does mean that a rise in the dollar is not automatic or inevitable if the Fed
raises
interest rates next month.
This
raises
concerns among public opinion that migrants rejected by some countries could flood those that do not impose tighter restrictions.
Yet the Sejm’s decision
raises
the question: Do Poles really want Jewish life to return to their country?
But EU member governments’ behavior during the past few months
raises
grave doubts about whether they see things this way.
That
raises
an obvious question: When regimes in the region collaborate with terrorist groups, how can intelligence cooperation with them, let alone a coalition to fight Islamic extremism, be credible?
Disease robs a poor country of the energy and talents of its people,
raises
treatment costs, and stymies economic growth.
Few of the challenges that it
raises
can be met unilaterally; more often than not, cooperation, compromise, and a degree of multilateralism are essential.
Every year on December 1, World Aids Day highlights the issue and
raises
global awareness.
But that
raises
two more questions: How much of an adjustment has Greece already made?
The Western powers' aversion to war
raises
risks of its own.
This crisis
raises
fundamental questions about globalization, which was supposed to help diffuse risk.
This
raises
the prospect of a direct conflict with other powers, not least Russia.
There cannot be many people in the financial sector who will be surprised if the Fed
raises
rates again this year.
Large reductions in public-sector wages brought down the primary deficit, but employment maintenance lowers productivity,
raises
costs, and delays adjustment.
But that
raises
an obvious question: How did a person who once looked like Russia’s most modern and dependable ruler since Czar Alexander II – a man whom US President George W. Bush called “very straightforward and trustworthy” in 2001 – suddenly become crazier than Rasputin?
The diffusion of these mechanisms
raises
the issue of democracy.
This
raises
a fundamental criticism Europe’s trade defense mechanisms.
Trade with countries that have very different economic, social, and political models
raises
genuine concerns about legitimacy.
This
raises
serious risks: as beneficial as Big Tech’s innovations are, they can also serve as important channels for state or non-state actors to bring about their own disruptions.
Even if the Fed
raises
rates another four times in 2018, other major central banks are unlikely to match it.
“The majority
raises
formidable barriers around the liberty of opinion,” and “undertakes to supply a multitude of ready-made opinions for the use of individuals, who are thus relieved from the necessity of forming opinions of their own.”
But punishing someone criminally for being an anti-Semite and a racist propagandist
raises
troublesome issues that different countries approach in different ways.
The tragedy of millions of impoverished people dying of AIDS even when drugs exist to treat them
raises
deep questions about global intellectual property rights, because patent protection is creating a barrier to essential medicines reaching the world's poor.
And, though the issue
raises
obvious questions of justice and efficiency – poor countries, having invested large sums in education, now produce graduates who take jobs and pay taxes abroad – Europe has provided little in the way of an effective response.
This new, more focused and limited American role thus
raises
the following question for America’s European partners: Can they afford the luxury of being unable to defend themselves without US help?
The most recent set of calls for coordination arise from fears – articulated, for example, by Raghuram Rajan, Governor of the Reserve Bank of India – that the Fed will not adequately take into account the adverse impact on emerging-market economies when it
raises
interest rates.
To say that emerging markets’ financial and fiscal positions are stronger
raises
the economist’s traditional question: Compared to what?
But in emerging economies with substantial dollar debts – whether private or public – devaluation
raises
the cost of outstanding debt (when measured in domestic currency) and can wreak havoc with balance sheets and creditworthiness.
But the episode
raises
a number of broader issues that won’t disappear so quickly.
A patent that
raises
the price of a drug a hundred-fold has the same effect on the market as a 10,000% tariff.
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