Reflects
in sentence
1553 examples of Reflects in a sentence
For one thing, the Fed’s retreat partly
reflects
growing confidence in the US economy, which should mean a stronger export market for most emerging economies.
Instead, it reflects, at least partly, the structure and sophistication of production and exports.
This
reflects
the Chinese Communist Party’s broader use of China’s “century of humiliation,” which allegedly ended only when the CCP established the People’s Republic in 1949, to fuel a resurgent nationalism.
The muddled, reactive response to the euro crisis
reflects
the compromises that traditional political parties have made in order to remain in power as generational differences have become increasingly extreme.
Moreover, a common monetary policy combined with independent fiscal policy is bound to fail: the former increases unemployment in weaker economies because the interest rate
reflects
average eurozone indicators (with large weights on Germany and France), but keeps borrowing costs low enough that weak economies’ governments can finance fiscal profligacy.
The assignment of exceptionally broad powers to the executive president under the new constitution
reflects
a populist vision of government according to which the elected leader, as the true representative of the nation, should not be hindered in pursuing the nation’s interests.
But limiting the significance of the “no” vote to mere political calculation would be a mistake, for it also
reflects
the importance of the “French malaise” about Europe.
A closer look at the problem suggests that the division over Iraq is not merely an isolated incident, but
reflects
a range of deep-seated difficulties.
Despite more than two decades of talk, the Security Council’s permanent membership (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States) still
reflects
the geopolitical realities of 1945, not 2015.
Although much of this poetry is not necessarily of high quality, it nonetheless underscores the image that Al Qaeda’s leadership wishes to project, namely that Al Qaeda’s message is authentic and
reflects
“real Islam.”
This
reflects
Russia's natural advantage as an energy producer.
In the lender’s view, the 17% interest rate that Greece’s government now has to pay for its 10-year bonds accurately
reflects
the lender’s risk in buying Greek government debt.
That alliance
reflects
fear, not commitment.
This
reflects
not only worries about energy and shared security concerns, but also the need to head off any looming crisis in the Middle East that could plunge large parts of the world into turmoil, if not armed conflict.
Some historians argue that Indonesia’s moderate form of Islam
reflects
the way in which foreign traders introduced it, as early as the fourteenth century.
Within Lebanon, the Sunni-Shiite divide
reflects
broader regional frictions between the Sunni-majority Arab states, particularly Saudi Arabia, which backs Saad Hariri, the late prime minister’s son, and Iran, which supports Hezbollah.
It is easy to suspect that this is not just a concession to changing social mores, but that it also
reflects
a desire to include as many declining prices as possible.
The deficit
reflects
the difference between domestic savings and investment.
To a large extent, this discrepancy
reflects
a low and delayed exchange-rate pass-through into US import prices, linked to America’s unique advantage of having more than 90% of its imported goods priced in its own currency, with dollar prices remaining unchanged for ten months at a time.
This commentary
reflects
the authors' personal views.
This decline
reflects
Europe’s slow growth in terms of both population and output per person.
This, too,
reflects
the long-term wane of US power.
Based on a total of 27 principles, the Declaration
reflects
a moral and professional consensus among human rights and equality experts and is the product of more than a year’s work led by the United Kingdom-based Equal Rights Trust.
This also
reflects
the fact that central features in many governments’ domestic and regional agendas are not even of their own making, but were imposed from outside the region.
As Yan Xuetong of Tsinghua University explained to me shortly after the US invasion of Iraq, a country’s support for intervention
reflects
a recognition of its own power.
But that mainly
reflects
weak investment demand, not strong consumption growth.
The contrast with its benign policy toward Libya in 2011
reflects
how Russian foreign policy changed with the return of Vladimir Putin to the Kremlin.
The Central Asian countries’ opposition to a customs union with Russia
reflects
their growing trade with China.
Closing TV-6 in many ways
reflects
what has gone wrong in Russia since 1991.
That
reflects
the small probability that the market is assigning to the occurrence of a full-blown financial crisis with bankruptcies and bank failures.
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