Reflects
in sentence
1553 examples of Reflects in a sentence
This both
reflects
and reinforces weakness in three areas: self-esteem, risk awareness, and the capacity for action.
The lack of outrage mainly
reflects
the Sri Lankan government’s success in embedding in the minds of policymakers and publics an alternative narrative that had extraordinary worldwide resonance in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
Oil’s price
reflects
its extraction, refining, and distribution costs, but not that of creating the raw material.
The expanding hunger crisis
reflects
a lethal combination of growing rural populations and inadequate food yields.
That
reflects
Saudi Arabia’s output increase of more than a million barrels a day, as well as mandated efficiency measures in the European Union, partly motivated by efforts to cut carbon dioxide emissions, which have contributed to a comparable drop in demand – by about 1.5% a year.
But I always emphasize that our overall trade deficit
reflects
the fact that the US spends more than it produces, requiring us to obtain the difference through net imports.
Many social movements recognize that language matters because it both
reflects
and reinforces injustices that need to be remedied.
Such support is clearly unsustainable; in fact, the CBR recently announced that it will allow the ruble to float, implying an exchange rate that
reflects
the market’s expectations concerning oil prices and future capital outflows.
But, in a sense, the Kremlin’s move actually
reflects
the enduring perception that the UN does still have some influence.
The IMF’s reaction to Brazil’s financial taxes
reflects
how ingrained finance fetishism has become, and how difficult it is to reintroduce some balance in the debate on capital flows – even in the aftermath of the greatest financial crisis the world has experienced since the Great Depression.
In reality, the trade imbalance
reflects
the difference between China’s large savings surplus and the even bigger US saving deficiency (largely explained by the US fiscal deficit).
That quiet, so different from the protests that greeted the North American Free Trade Area's creation a decade ago,
reflects
NAFTA's clear achievement in facilitating and integrating economic exchange among its three partners.
The return to full employment
reflects
the Federal Reserve’s strategy of “unconventional monetary policy” – the combination of massive purchases of long-term assets known as quantitative easing and its promise to keep short-term interest rates close to zero.
But that puts the cart before the horse: The predominance of big companies partly
reflects
anti-GM activism, which has made the approval process so long and costly that only rich companies catering to first-world farmers can afford to see it through.
Trump’s success so far
reflects
his shrewdness at reading the times and pleasing a crowd.
But the two dynamics have something in common: intransigence, even if coming from different quarters,
reflects
a denial of reality.
But it also
reflects
the Chinese government’s constant fear that regional tensions may lead to national fragmentation.
This decision, promoted mainly by the United States,
reflects
the sad dereliction of U.S. leadership evident in so many parts of the world.
This newfound awareness
reflects
the fact that it is intangible assets like digital software, not physical manufactured goods, that are driving the new phase of global growth.
As is often the case, fiction best
reflects
the changing mood.
The chaos now prevailing on the US political scene
reflects
this.
Ironically, this bizarre new operating environment partly
reflects
Trump’s own business background.
According to Sarkozy, “The virulence of the press and a portion of French elites against the United States
reflects
a certain envy of your brilliant success.”
The best-known means by which Japanese students are ranked is hensachi – literally translated as “standard deviation” – which
reflects
how far from the statistical mean a typical student admitted to a given institution scores on a test focused on memorized formulas and facts.
All of the major emerging economies face weakening external demand, but India’s slowdown has been exacerbated by a drop in investment that
reflects
a deeper loss of official direction and business confidence.
After their elections this year, France and Germany should issue a joint proposal that
reflects
concerns about collective responsibility, individual flexibility, and EU solidarity.
Basic economics tells us that the US trade deficit
reflects
the aggregate levels of domestic saving and investment.
The partnership’s limited strategic dimension largely
reflects
the concerns of the EU’s three biggest members – the United Kingdom, France, and Germany.
This continued vulnerability
reflects
a collective failure to reform the global monetary system – an imperative that People’s Bank of China (PBOC) Governor Zhou Xiaochuan highlighted in early 2009.
In Germany and Austria, most such crimes are still committed by right-wing extremists, but, elsewhere in Western Europe, the increase
reflects
attitudes among young immigrant males – a finding documented by an exhaustive report released by the US State Department in 2005.
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