Reflected
in sentence
1251 examples of Reflected in a sentence
If the real trade-weighted value of the dollar falls by 25% over the coming decade, and the full effect of that dollar decline is
reflected
in import prices, the increased cost of imports would reduce the growth of US real incomes by about 0.4% a year.
That
reflected
the substantial progress Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti’s government had already made.
The Chinese government’s 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-2020)
reflected
its commitment to market allocation of resources and lowering the costs of doing business.
Such ideas are
reflected
in opinions polls in which Europeans claim that Israel and the US are the true dangers to world peace.
We were astonished during President George W. Bush’s first term at the administration’s hostility to science,
reflected
in its stance on climate change and Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution.
France was a core part of Europe when the Union had only six members and
reflected
the primary goal of Franco-German reconciliation.
Sweden's economy rose and fell with the IT bubble,
reflected
in telecoms giant Ericsson's troubles today.
America’s initial indifference was best
reflected
in President Harry Truman’s reaction when Chester Bowles asked to be named ambassador to India: “I thought India was pretty jammed with poor people and cows round streets, witch doctors, and people sitting on hot coals and bathing in the Ganges…but I did not realize anybody thought it was important.”
In the Brezhnev era, expansionist policies
reflected
the country’s new energy-derived wealth.
This technology-driven shift in the way people create, curate, share, and apply data should be
reflected
in development efforts for two reasons.
That anarchic fury
reflected
the disappointment of radicals at their leaders for prematurely surrendering to the authorities rather than fighting to their last breath.
The effort by Trump and his Congressional allies to emasculate former President Barack Obama’s signature health-insurance program
reflected
Republicans’ commitment to scaling back, not expanding, social protections.
This is
reflected
in the success of recent Hollywood movies such as The Big Short (which has been rightly praised for making complex instruments like derivatives broadly understandable).
And it is
reflected
in the current presidential campaign – most notably, in remarkable support for Senator Bernie Sanders’s leftist bid for the Democratic nomination.
Making matters worse, central banks routinely deny responsibility for any prices other than consumer prices, ignoring that the value of money is
reflected
in all prices, including commodities, real estate, stocks, bonds, and, perhaps most important, exchange rates.
In this environment,
reflected
in Trump’s embrace of the antiquated Westphalian model of nation-states, achieving the SDGs will probably be impossible.
During the early transition years, the lack of an effective monetary-policy framework
reflected
the challenge of establishing new institutions and regulations, as well as the difficulty of overcoming the legacy of central planning, under which budget and credit financing were indistinguishable.
As John Limbert, the erudite Iran scholar and retired US diplomat (taken hostage in Iran for 444 days) once
reflected
on the 1979 Iranian revolution, “Our liberal-minded Iranian friends proved to be helpless in political turmoil....[T]hey could write biting editorials,” but lacked the stomach to “throw acid, beat up opponents, organize street gangs...and engage in the brutality that wins” in political uprisings.
Many ordinary Czechs, on the other hand, had come to dislike him not only for what seemed like relentless moralizing, but also because he
reflected
back to them their own lack of courage during the communist regime.
For once, the faltering Czech presidency of the EU
reflected
a European consensus when it defined Obama’s astronomic financial stimulus as a “road to hell.”
US President Donald Trump’s administration continues to tout an “America First” policy approach, reflected, most recently, in the imposition of large tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.
The difference is
reflected
in economic growth.
To be sure, many of the Sykes-Picot borders
reflected
deals cut in Europe rather than local demographic or historical realities.
Americans, including farmers, are more accustomed to paying for innovative technologies and products--a disposition
reflected
in a recent US Supreme Court decision that extended the scope of patents on plants.
Above all, we must reckon with the rise of ecological awareness, which in Europe is
reflected
in the formation and strength of Green parties, and which nurtures anti-globalization sentiments.
The Politburo did not immediately have appropriate and complete information that would have
reflected
the situation after the explosion.
From 1999 to 2013, real per capita GDP rose at an annual rate of about 1% (which
reflected
a more modest rise of real GDP and an actual decline in population).
Democracy
reflected
India’s diversity, since Indians are accustomed to the idea of difference.
Education is increasingly a collective enterprise, and this must be
reflected
in the skills it provides to graduates.
But urban youth and educated professionals, too, are larger in number and more politically active than ever before – a change
reflected
in the sudden rise and surprising success of “occupy” protest movements demanding an end to patronage politics.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
Would
Economic
Recent
Other
Political
Growth
Countries
Policy
Between
People
There
About
Global
Country
Should
Government
Could
Years