Regulate
in sentence
350 examples of Regulate in a sentence
Worse still, they have received support from the Fed, which one might have expected to adopt a more cautious stance, given the scale of its past mistakes and the extent to which it is evident that it reflects the interests of the banks that it was supposed to
regulate.
Indeed, it put the EU at the forefront of efforts to liberalize and
regulate
international trade, enabling us to reap the full benefits of globalization.
It has been asserted that the report advocates giving the European Union the power to
regulate
independent national media.
But no industry can be trusted entirely to
regulate
itself.
Reports that the group’s recommendations would empower the EU to protect media freedom, not to
regulate
the media – and even criticism that the recommendations leave too much to national authorities – support the latter interpretation.
Rather, the best case arises from a general sense that financial institutions have become too complicated to
regulate
and too big to fail even when staying within their traditional businesses.
If big banks have become too complex to regulate, then a workable Volcker Rule is the best way to start simplifying them.
In 2006, 12 states sued the Environmental Protection Agency for its failure to classify greenhouse gases as pollutants, and to
regulate
them accordingly.
Labour leaders like Clement Attlee, the first prime minister after World War II, were not opposed to a market economy; they just wanted to
regulate
markets in such a way that might best serve working-class interests.
A "sunshine law" to
regulate
political donations was enacted before the ballots were cast.
But the lesson from the current crisis is that we will have to develop styles of global economic governance to manage, regulate, and mitigate the creative, but often disruptive forces unleashed by the global market.
And as countries become richer, they can afford to
regulate
and cut even outdoor air pollution.
Recent graduates are needed in legislative and administrative agencies to analyze the legal infrastructure of finance, and
regulate
it so that it produces the greatest results for society.
America cannot stem this tide by closing its borders; but it can
regulate
the tide by legalizing and humanizing it, and by helping to create conditions in Latin America where life-threatening emigration is not the only way out.
If “too big to fail” also means “too big to regulate,” the perception of increased safety will not last long.
In developing countries, distortionary measures that tax, subsidize, or
regulate
food and energy prices tend to be poor tools for improving income distribution, and frequently have the opposite effect.
Interestingly, despite the UK reform, the weak international trend remains toward integrated regulation, and away from the traditional model whereby different agencies
regulate
insurance and securities, while the central bank oversees the banking system.
Indeed, as the consequences of companies’ actions are exposed, public trust in those businesses – not to mention in the government that was supposed to
regulate
them – will be decimated.
Gapper also quotes Mike Mayo, a leading analyst of the banking sector: “Citi is too big to fail, too big to regulate, too big to manage, and it has operated as if it’s too big to care.”Even
The international community has put in place minimal codes that
regulate
areas like health and nuclear weapons proliferation.
However, all attempts of this kind have one thing in common: they do not touch the basic trends from which these threats arise, but merely
regulate
their impact.
The implication is that emerging markets, while encouraging foreign banks’ entry, should at the same time strictly
regulate
such banks’ local lending practices.
In backing initiatives that would
regulate
the sale and use of marijuana, the voters of Colorado and Washington did not vote recklessly.
Moreover, proposals to decriminalize or
regulate
certain drugs are routinely being presented around the world.
They run and
regulate
health-care systems and primary, secondary, tertiary, and vocational education.
A Crisis of TrustLONDON – Public trust in financial institutions, and in the authorities that are supposed to
regulate
them, was an early casualty of the financial crisis.
The latter point, which no doubt reflects the Obama administration’s attempts to reform the dysfunctional system it inherited, is particularly important, as the sharpest declines in investment intentions were among those who had lost confidence in the government’s ability to
regulate.
Contrary to the view that emotions interfere with clear thinking, the ability to understand and
regulate
emotions can result in more effective thinking.
The anomaly that countries have decided to endow an international body with powers to
regulate
disputes in trading goods, but not in financial transactions, should be corrected.
The real goal is to restrict governments’ ability to
regulate
and tax corporations – that is, to restrict their ability to impose responsibilities, not just uphold rights.
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