Regulations
in sentence
1305 examples of Regulations in a sentence
But significant progress has yet to be made, owing partly to excessive business
regulations
and labor-market inefficiencies.
Migration is a multidimensional issue; it requires a comprehensive approach that also respects existing national laws and
regulations.
Trump and his minions work daily to undermine global agreements and domestic
regulations
that have been put in place to accelerate the shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy.
They have little if any say over domestic and international
regulations.
Each of the separate networks belongs to different companies and organizations, and they rely on physical servers in different countries with varying laws and
regulations.
Data protection and privacy
regulations
are meant to return to us some of our lost autonomy regarding what we see, what guides our choices, and who knows what we choose.
Since the G-20’s meeting at Cannes last November, for example, Europe has increased its financial firewalls by €200 billion ($252 billion), restructured Greek debt, taken steps towards strengthening its banks and banking regulations, established rules for fiscal discipline, and implemented a range of labor- and product-market reforms.
When Kuron asked if he could have a cigarette, Eagleburger, frustrated perhaps by his doctors’ nagging advice and new State Department regulations, responded: “You smoke?!?Fantastic!
Elites must give up their privileges, and
regulations
on corporate governance must limit collusion between managers and civil servants or politicians.
The CCAMLR is governed by a commission of 24 member states – including Argentina, Australia, Chile, Japan, Norway, Russia, South Africa, South Korea, Ukraine, the United States and the European Union – that meets annually in Hobart, Australia, to discuss new fishing
regulations
concerning marine species in the Southern Ocean.
And the UK has a national regulatory agency for IVF, whereas the US has a patchwork of state
regulations
(or a lack thereof).
Countries that are active in the Baltic Sea region, for starters, should exchange “due regard”
regulations
– the national operating procedures that state aircraft must follow when in the proximity of civilians.
Other recommendations include stopping tax avoidance by multinational companies, regulating tax havens, and developing labor
regulations
to stop globalization’s “race to the bottom.”
After the crisis, world leaders and central bankers overhauled banking regulations, first and foremost by rectifying the Basel prudential rules.
In order to overcome these shortcomings in international banking regulations, three remedies are needed.
Would-be borrowers do indeed face genuine challenges as a result of these regulations; but that is nothing compared to the pain that a collapsing bubble would cause.
China could also expand its tech sector through homegrown entrepreneurship, except that the Chinese economy does not provide easy access to credit and is hamstrung by excessive
regulations
that make it difficult to start a competitive business.
This talent drain is likely to be exacerbated as pay
regulations
impose a one-size-fits-all regime.
As an illustration, current
regulations
for GM foods, if applied to non-GM products, would bar the sale of potatoes and tomatoes, which can contain poisonous glycoalkaloids; celery, which contains carcinogenic psoralens; rhubarb and spinach (oxalic acid); and cassava, which feeds about half a billion people, but contains toxic cyanogenic alkaloids.
Whereas every American Internet start-up benefits from a huge domestic market, their European counterparts are limited by domestic
regulations
to smaller local markets.
There is little evidence to support the anti-Europeans' argument that EU
regulations
hobble British trade outside of Europe; on the contrary, substantial extra-EU trade and investment opportunities would be lost were Britain to leave.
Suffocating
regulations
must be lifted.
A second condition supporting SS1 is rooted in the impact of heightened uncertainty – about growth, job security, policies and regulations, and the many developments that could affect any of those factors – on investment and consumption.
Under international banking
regulations
prepared by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the club of central banks based in Basle, Switzerland, banks must maintain adequate bank capital.
In the way that bank assets are counted, however, accounting
regulations
allow for banks to lend four times as much in short-term loans to other banks as in long-term loans.
Thus, supposedly benign accounting
regulations
actually encouraged banks to multiply their short-term lending, and to cut back on their long-term lending.
These
regulations
seem to make sense for an individual bank.
Not long ago, consumers, workers, and community members rose up in a global shareholder spring, aimed at companies that were acting in bad faith, by rewarding failing CEOs, flouting environmental regulations, or failing to respect workers’ rights.
The privilege that government debt enjoys under current banking
regulations
should be eliminated, and an independent banking regulator, separate from the European Central Bank, should be established within the eurozone.
In a country with stringent
regulations
and underdeveloped financial markets, private entrepreneurs face high barriers to starting and operating businesses.
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