Reflects
in sentence
1553 examples of Reflects in a sentence
How you define your interests
reflects
how you define your country.
For example, competitiveness has to do with the ability to increase market share without sacrificing margins or lowering wages, something that
reflects
superior productivity.
To Trump’s mind, the trade deficit
reflects
difficulties for American enterprises, and implies that Americans are buying foreign instead of US goods.
Their behavior also
reflects
the implied guarantee of official government mercantilism, as well as the complacency of China’s state-owned enterprises, which account for most Chinese overseas investment.
Together they show how a new generation of African leaders understand that power in the twenty-first century
reflects
strength in numbers.
This remarkably low level
reflects
both the small share of household income in total GDP and the high rate of household saving.
The high rate of household saving in China
reflects
many factors, including the risk of job loss and the lack of a reliable government pension program.
The success of Germany’s Green Party
reflects
the focus that it has placed on many of these issues.
This kind of bloodless rhetoric
reflects
the inadequacy of the responses to climate change that international negotiations have so far produced.
To be sure, this complex web of interconnected events
reflects
the declining global role of the US.
Observers may disagree about whether German leaders’ stance provides a welcome sign of reliability or
reflects
a lamentable lack of diplomatic ambition.
Much of the euro’s design
reflects
the neoliberal economic doctrines that prevailed when the single currency was conceived.
More from "Zone Defense"Much of the euro’s design
reflects
the neoliberal economic doctrines that prevailed when the single currency was conceived.
The Social Democrats argue that this
reflects
a serious health problem, while non-socialists suggest that the system is defective.
In advanced economies, that message
reflects
three trends.
Economists such as Robert Gordon of Northwestern University argue that this slump in productivity growth
reflects
the stagnation of technology.
At first, most of ASEAN’s member governments responded mildly to the verdict, expressing their “disappointment” – a stance that
reflects
the group’s principle of noninterference in fellow members’ internal politics.
The sharing economy
reflects
the convergence of entrepreneurialism and technological connectivity.
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni’s Kadima party, opposition leader Binyamin Netanyahu’s Likud party, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s Labor party all fall – with only secondary variations – within a centrist consensus, which also
reflects
a popular national consensus.
The predominant Western view that Xi’s growing authority represents a dangerous trend partly
reflects
anxiety over growing challenges to democracy in the United States and across Europe.
That failure partly
reflects
the short-termism that tends to dominate in Western democracies, where short electoral cycles (from about six months to four years) often compel politicians to focus on cyclical issues, rather than on structural impediments to long-term productivity gains and income growth.
More broadly, China’s leaders have set a 30-year target for modernizing the country’s economy and governance – a long-term goal that
reflects
the kind of vision that few countries have managed to articulate, let alone implement.
Obama’s one new priority – to expand US support for African farmers –
reflects
a shrewd appreciation of how the expansion of agriculture can quickly lift many rural Africans out of poverty.
We must think about a new global economic order that more fully
reflects
the changing realities of our time.
Clearly, the EU needs a new impetus that
reflects
twenty-first-century challenges and opportunities.
The fact that the country has again become fashionable
reflects
the confusion in eurozone policymakers’ economic thinking and the folly of imitation across think tanks and international institutions.
The Trump administration would like us to believe that the dollar’s rise
reflects
faster economic growth, driven by the president’s agenda of deregulation, massive tax cuts, and substantially expanded defense spending.
The slow launch of longevity bonds ultimately
reflects
a fundamental question: can we genuinely reduce the impact of longevity risk?
Indeed, the breadth of the opposition to Morsi
reflects
a major global tendency toward the empowerment of the educated and connected middle classes, whose members tend to be suspicious of political parties and demand more direct political participation.
This lack of action
reflects
the increased complexity and linkages of the global financial system, and the absence of an effective anchor for financial stability.
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