Ranging
in sentence
441 examples of Ranging in a sentence
Bush “did present himself as a conservative...[and] conservatism is hostile, for reasons
ranging
from the abstract and philosophical to the concrete and practical, to high spending and high taxing....”And then she falls into near-complete despair: “Mr.
Governance failures,
ranging
from corruption to inefficient implementation of reforms, also pose a serious challenge, as do social and political tensions (and, in some areas, the threat of terrorism).
The logic behind Macron’s labor-market reforms has driven the structural-reform agenda of policy economists and international institutions
ranging
from the International Monetary Fund to the OECD during the last three decades.
Income gaps are growing for many reasons,
ranging
from “skill-biased” technological progress to corruption.
They disagree about how many, with estimates
ranging
broadly, from 40 to more than 400 warheads.
This is an all-encompassing brief, covering everything we do as a community and an economy in areas
ranging
from international trade to art, culture, and tourism.
They define entrepreneurs as people who report income from a company that they control and work in at least part-time, and find that the proportion of entrepreneurs in the population differs substantially across the 289 municipalities that they studied,
ranging
from 1.5% to 18.5%.
Matteo Salvini, the leader of Italy’s League party who is now Minister of the Interior in Italy’s coalition government, recalls the cozy atmosphere of his meeting with Putin in 2014: “We talked about the absurd sanctions against Russia introduced by the cowardly EU that defends the interests not of its own citizens, but rather of the economic oligarchs,” and about “important topics
ranging
from the protection of national autonomy to the fight against illegal immigrants and defense of traditional values.”
Meanwhile, companies are complaining that they cannot fill open positions in sectors
ranging
from technology to health care.
Time for a Carbon TaxWASHINGTON, DC – Over the last few decades, oil prices have fluctuated widely –
ranging
from $10 to $140 a barrel – posing a challenge to producers and consumers alike.
But the transparency and vigilance that a free and independent press provides are critical not only to democracy; they also serve as powerful weapons against forces,
ranging
from corruption to bad business practices, that undermine economic prosperity.
Many foreign news websites,
ranging
from the BBC to Reuters, are routinely blocked from Chinese readers.
Their misgivings have been strengthened by the “Peace Process Roadmap to 2015,” a document prepared by the Karzai-constituted Afghan High Peace Council that sketches several potential concessions to the Taliban and Pakistan,
ranging
from the Taliban’s recognition as a political party to a role for Pakistan in Afghanistan’s internal affairs.
Greece and Turkey have signed eighteen mutually beneficial agreements in areas
ranging
from trade and energy, to environmental protection and the fight against organized crime.
But 2016 offers plenty of opportunities for correction, in areas
ranging
from trade to migration.
Finally, the move toward open data serves a variety of socially desirable ends,
ranging
from the reuse of publicly funded research to support work on poverty, inclusion, or discrimination, to the disclosure by corporations such as Nike of their supply-chain data and environmental impact.
This development may be of historic importance if it not only leads to a deepening of US-Indian technical and economic ties, but also strengthens their ability to tackle regional and global challenges,
ranging
from the proliferation of nuclear weapons to climate change.
These protests have run, on and off, for nearly 200 days, with crowd sizes
ranging
from a few hundred to tens of thousands.
Continuing to strengthen its position on the world stage is now a matter of meeting and even exceeding global standards in areas
ranging
from sustainability to good governance.
Since November 2016, and particularly since Trump’s inauguration in January last year, newspapers have led with stories
ranging
from conflicts of interest involving Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to evidence that the president’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, met with former Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.
This knee-jerk reaction presumes that China’s current slowdown is but a prelude to more growth disappointments to come – a presumption that reflects widespread and longstanding fears of a broad array of disaster scenarios,
ranging
from social unrest and environmental catastrophes to housing bubbles and shadow-banking blow-ups.
During the meeting, Onodera and his Indian counterpart affirmed their countries’ intention to “strengthen the Strategic and Global Partnership between Japan and India,” including “measures
ranging
from regular joint-combat exercises and military exchanges to cooperation in anti-piracy, maritime security, and counter-terrorism.”
An even more visible change is the sudden increase in criminal charges –
ranging
from corruption to sexual offenses – being filed against members of the old elite.
Nowhere is this truer than in the US, where Trump has engaged in unrelenting attacks on institutions
ranging
from the mainstream media to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, not to mention adopting a rather cavalier attitude toward basic economic facts.
Policy mistakes
ranging
from tax hikes to poor central-bank decisions to a global wave of protectionism (most famously America’s Smoot-Hawley tariff) turned a deep recession into the Great Depression.
Regional cooperation should include areas
ranging
from trade, transport, and transit, to water and energy, as well as efforts to control of drug trafficking.
And the substantial capital inflows since 2010 have caused sharp asset-price increases and swift credit expansion in countries
ranging
from Chile to Malaysia.
Their conventional wisdom is that “the system” – global governance structures
ranging
from the World Trade Organization and the G-20 to the major central banks – is badly broken and in desperate need of repair.
Many day-to-day cross-border services,
ranging
from freight transport to hairdressing, face major barriers and restrictions.
Moreover, China has been charged with egregious violations of international rules,
ranging
from allegations of currency manipulation and state-subsidized dumping of excess capacity to cyber-hacking and forced technology transfer.
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