Reflects
in sentence
1553 examples of Reflects in a sentence
Its demise
reflects
the destructive power of the narrative about the peace process that the right succeeded in persuading many Israelis to accept.
This more nuanced view presumably
reflects
a new appreciation, whether born of security briefings or the sobering fact of actually occupying the Oval Office, that the world is a dangerous place.
Orthodoxy
reflects
history’s painfully acquired lessons – the sum of what we regard to be true.
At the core of the diplomatic impasse is the EU’s demand that Turkey amend its anti-terror legislation to ensure that it
reflects
more closely the norms established by the European Court of Human Rights.
Far greater auto fuel efficiency in Europe than the US
reflects
much higher gasoline and diesel taxes.
The second, paradoxically,
reflects
our growing cynicism towards politics and politicians.
Far from being based on chest-thumping nationalism, Abe’s national-security strategy reflects, above all, a deep awareness of how a lost generation of economic growth has affected the Japanese.
This does not mean that Abe’s Japan will become an ally like France under Jacques Chirac, spurning US leadership for the sake of it; instead, Abe seeks a policy of cooperation with the US that
reflects
the alliance's voluntary nature.
Rapidly intensifying water scarcity
reflects
bulging populations, depletion of groundwater, waste and pollution, and the enormous and increasingly dire effects of manmade climate change.
Investors require above-market rates for renewable power or similar compensation that
reflects
the social benefits of emissions free energy.
Political apathy
reflects
many factors, but two stand out.
But while the officer corps may be steadfast defenders of secular rule, the rank and file
reflects
Pakistani society.
In part, this drop
reflects
the reduction in market value of the existing liabilities.
The gap, instead,
reflects
recent historical choices.
The United Kingdom’s vote for Brexit
reflects
a similar backlash.
Likewise, the revival of the Shia-Sunni civil war in Iraq largely
reflects
the sectarian rule of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
Faced with 1.2 million (highly vocal) Canadians of Ukrainian descent, the Harper government’s strong response to the crisis also
reflects
domestic political necessity.
More important, the current situation
reflects
a lack of wisdom, responsibility, and basic decency on the part of political and religious leaders, who prefer to fuel, rather than dampen, inter-communal strife.
This simply
reflects
the reality of monetary-policy interdependence: if the US Federal Reserve’s policy of so-called quantitative easing weakens the dollar, others have to respond to prevent undue appreciation of their currencies.
That decision – and the speed with which it was reached –
reflects
the insight that the euro area’s institutional framework will remain incomplete until there are clear rules for handling financial crises.
Russia's recent strong growth partly
reflects
the reforms of the early 1990s, and the reform achievements of 2000 and 2001 will feed through to measurable economic performance only in, say, 2005.
The evolution of European attitudes toward genetically modified foods and plants
reflects
just such a dual concern with health and identity.
The problem partly
reflects
a lack of consensus about the criteria that a judicial candidate must satisfy.
Its focus on “discipline” reflects, first and foremost, a predisposition embedded in Germany’s culture and universities to link economics with moral philosophy.
Bush’s Gambling DebtsGeorge W. Bush’s economic policies have been based on an extraordinarily reckless gamble that
reflects
a political coalition of two major forces: the super-rich and evangelical Christians.
The first
reflects
my French perspective, but can also be applied to other Western countries.
As a result, for too many people in Greece, austerity
reflects
Germany's deranged obsession with discipline, not their country's profligacy.
On the left, a preoccupation with Keynesian stimulus
reflects
a misunderstanding of both the availability of measures (shovel-ready projects) and their desirability (whether they will meaningfully change the expectations of households and businesses).
The discrepancy partly
reflects
the dominant share of services in modern advanced economies, relative to manufacturing and agriculture.
This failure
reflects
the dominance of conventional economics, which has produced closed-minded group-thinking within the global central banking community.
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