Reflects
in sentence
1553 examples of Reflects in a sentence
A new G-7 needs to be created within the G-20, thereby providing China with a degree of influence that
reflects
its economic weight and requires it to assume a commensurate proportion of global responsibility.
The propensity to use this inconsistent argument
reflects
a proclivity for the status quo and a bias against policy innovation.
Investors need assurance that information received adequately
reflects
the economic situation of a firm.
But such thinking
reflects
an extrapolation from one largely aberrant period in history.
But her admonition also
reflects
a broader national preoccupation with economic might, befitting a vast country with continent-size aspirations.
The post-bubble aversion to spending, and the related focus on balance-sheet repair,
reflects
what Nomura Research Institute economist Richard Koo has called a powerful “debt rejection” syndrome.
Moreover, though the US unemployment rate has fallen, this largely
reflects
an alarming decline in labor-force participation, with more than 6.5 million Americans since 2006 having given up looking for work.
The fourth lesson similarly
reflects
developments extending back further than 20 years.
The most effective – and thus the most credible – monetary policy is one that
reflects
not only the lessons of history, but also a willingness to reconsider long-held assumptions.
This
reflects
the absence of adequate political institutions at the center.
Rasheed is just turning 40, and his life
reflects
his country’s dramas: part of what has been called a “lost generation” of Iraqi artists and intellectuals, he and his friends were isolated for years by sanctions.
Now Rasheed
reflects
on his country’s turn toward religious extremism: he describes a pre-invasion Iraq in which women were professionals and fairly emancipated, whereas now women wear headscarves under pressure, “for a peaceful life.”
And his decision to accept North Korea’s invitation to hold bilateral talks on its nuclear program
reflects
the same “bring it on” attitude that he applied to the North’s earlier threats of war.
This may sound legalistic, and it certainly
reflects
political motivations.
Politics, at its core,
reflects
the interplay of interests at the national level.
Macron’s method is also marked by a strong reliance on an intergovernmental approach, which most likely
reflects
his understanding of French voters’ current mood.
American Sniper, directed by Clint Eastwood,
reflects
US mores as much as Leviathan
reflects
the current Russian Zeitgeist.
The increased pace of warming
reflects
the impact of complex non-linear factors and a variety of “tipping points” that can result in acceleration of the process.
That Japan acted with alacrity after September 11 th
reflects
the trauma experienced during the Gulf War a decade ago.
The last US census showed a marked increase in the number of Americans living below the poverty line, a fact closely related to lack of health insurance, which in turn
reflects
over-reliance on employer-based insurance coverage.
The difference
reflects
a combination of the lower rate on short-term debt and the highly favorable terms on which Greece is now able to borrow from official lenders at the IMF and the ECB.
But it also
reflects
non-cooperative policy choices.
That
reflects
a recurring tendency in official policy debates, particularly in the eurozone, to concentrate on fixable problems to the exclusion of more difficult issues.
This
reflects
the benefits that NATO believes can be drawn from Israel’s unique military experience.
David Ben-Gurion’s dream of Israel becoming a NATO member might not materialize, but the developing partnership
reflects
the Alliance’s unequivocal recognition that Israel shares the challenges facing the West and is a vital partner in developing responses to them.
According to Trump’s national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, the administration’s position
reflects
its belief that Kim is crazy, and that “classical deterrence theory” thus does not apply.
North Korean thinking
reflects
cunning, to be sure; but it also betrays the regime’s will to survive, and its desire to master the current situation.
In Britain, over-dependence on financial services
reflects
the view that finance is the central coordinating activity of economic life, which made more sense in the nineteenth century than it does today.
Unfortunately, the coalition's neglect of forensic issues
reflects
its wider failure to devise any strategy to address issues concerning the rule of law and justice, or any central body with the authority to begin building the necessary institutions.
It
reflects
Kazakhstan’s appreciation of the liberal world order into which it was born in 1991 – an order that, at that time, had just received a major boost, with the Soviet Union’s collapse.
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