Recipe
in sentence
414 examples of Recipe in a sentence
This will lack credibility under Mubarak, whose refusal to stand down is a
recipe
for chaos.
Coming out of a destructive bout of stagflation in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the US also needed a new economic
recipe.
This is a recipe, not for growth, but for increasing poverty.
Murdoch’s newspapers and television networks might as well have patented the
recipe
for the deceitful, dog-whistle politics that powered Trump’s rise and the Brexit vote.
Cutting growth rates by 40-70% is surely a
recipe
for stagnant societies with insufficient growth to satisfy private wants and public needs.
Nor can the small uptick in the eurozone’s growth, much less the relatively rapid expansion in Spain and Ireland, be attributed to the German
recipe
of fiscal consolidation and measures to increase export competitiveness.
This is a labor-intensive, resource-efficient, environmentally-friendly growth
recipe
– precisely what China needs in the next phase of its development.
The historical record is clear: protectionism, isolationism, and “America first” policies are a
recipe
for economic and military disaster.
In today’s crisis, muddling through would be a
recipe
for a continuation of the crisis and secular stagnation of the type once described by Alvin Hansen, a contemporary of Keynes.
That is not exactly a
recipe
for a broad-based and socially optimal economic recovery.
This is why delaying the adoption of long-term targets is not a
recipe
for business as usual.
When US President Herbert Hoover tried that recipe, it helped transform the 1929 stock-market crash into the Great Depression.
There is a simple Keynesian recipe: First, shift spending away from unproductive uses – such as wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, or unconditional bank bailouts that do not revive lending – toward high-return investments.
This is a
recipe
for frustration among an educated labor force that is too often denied the opportunity to fulfill its potential.
Add to this the pledge not to raise taxes on anyone earning less than $250,000 and you have a
recipe
for large fiscal deficits as long as this president can serve.
From Economic Analysis to Inclusive GrowthWASHINGTON, DC – Most economies are seeking a
recipe
for inclusive economic growth, whereby high rates of investment, rapid innovation, and strong GDP gains are pursued alongside measures to reduce income inequality.
This is a
recipe
for disaster.
There is no ready-made
recipe
awaiting them in a French economist’s magnum opus.
If there is one thing that everyone agrees on about the East Asian recipe, it is that Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and of course China all were exceptionally good at moving their labor from the countryside (or informal activities) to organized manufacturing.
But this time-tested
recipe
has become a lot less effective these days, owing to changes in manufacturing technologies and the global context.
For those whose living standards have stagnated or declined in recent decades, even as political leaders have touted free trade and capital flows as the
recipe
for increased prosperity, the argument holds considerable appeal.
Good sense and experience should tell us that selfish sloganeering, violating the rule of law, and dismissing international commitments is not a
recipe
for good policy.
That is a
recipe
for disaster.
But authoritarianism and ham-fisted diplomacy are not exactly a
recipe
for success in the twenty-first century.
In these circumstances, the loss of a two-state perspective would be a
recipe
for further indignities and deepening misery.
And when liberals engage in international military conflict, their worldview is a
recipe
for total and perpetual war, because their commitment to abstract norms encourages them to view their opponents not merely as competitors but rather as “absolute enemies.”
Working around existing treaties just looks like more of the same old
recipe
– a denial of a massive problem that everyone sees.
The attitude of indifference to income distribution is in fact a
recipe
for economic growth without end, with the rich, very rich, and super-rich drawing ever further ahead of the rest.
But provoking fear is seldom the best
recipe
for avoiding further violence.
But arms-control talks are built upon the concept of the balance of forces, which is a sure
recipe
for reviving confrontational and militaristic thinking.
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