Regulations
in sentence
1305 examples of Regulations in a sentence
Without that prospect, no candidate country would go through the painful process of adopting the tens of thousands of rules and
regulations
contained in the Acquis Communautaire (the body of EU law).
But the Internet’s easy accessibility and low entry barriers have led to spam and malware and bad behavior; each new service starts out “clean,” but then ends up requiring its own
regulations.
In fact, the EU seems to have no conceptual framework for accommodating neighboring countries that aren’t actively importing its norms and
regulations.
To make matters worse, the White House’s proposed cuts to the National Weather Service and its loosening of environmental and zoning
regulations
will further impede disaster management.
Groundbreaking research in economics was carried out by the likes of Adam Smith and Antoine Cournot, leading to novel interventions like progressive income tax, as well as new labor laws and
regulations.
They suggested that a UK freed of burdensome EU
regulations
could offer a more business-friendly environment and lower corporate tax rates, and thus become a magnet for foreign investment.
Finally,
regulations
were reduced in a wide range of industries, including air transport and the financial sector.
The lawyers and corporate elites who draft and enact the legislation and
regulations
that govern globalization are disconnected from those who are supposed to implement the policies at the local level.
If financial
regulations
are loosened too much, the result could be another asset and credit bubble, and even another financial crisis and recession.
Meanwhile, Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement, combined with a rollback of environmental regulations, will lead to ecological degradation and slower growth in green-economy industries such as solar power.
In the EU we have " regulations," "directives," "decisions," "general guidelines," "common strategies," "common actions," "common positions" - a myriad that only experts can comprehend.
In this simplified system, legislation will be called legislation, and executive regulations, as in most legal systems, will fill in the gaps in primary legislation.
New
regulations
have recently been introduced with the specific aim of cracking down on moonlighting.
Governments can impose regulations, but in the end we will get the kind of journalism for which we ask.
The remaining countries have no
regulations
at all and have made little progress in drafting them.
Reducing the prices of staple food by even a modest 10% (far below the average premium cartels around the world charge) by tackling anticompetitive behavior in these sectors, or by reforming
regulations
that shield them from competition, could lift 270,000 people in Kenya, 200,000 in South Africa, and 20,000 in Zambia out of poverty.
As a Supreme Court justice, of course, Holmes opposed antitrust
regulations.
Islamic banking, for example, may soon be introduced, though some local and foreign investors argue that sharia
regulations
could drive away much-needed foreign investment.
Most developing countries argue that the problem is rooted in the provision of capital, with investors preferring to fill their infrastructure portfolios with low-risk projects, and insurance companies and banks facing overly restrictive
regulations.
For society to function, it must provide individuals with incentives not to do so, through rewards and punishments,
regulations
and fines.
Start-ups take risks, yet existing
regulations
make it difficult to liquidate companies, deterring potential creditors and increasing the cost of debt.
To realize this potential, policymakers should eliminate arcane
regulations
that handcuff businesses; accelerate infrastructure projects; make the labor market more flexible; remove market distortions; and expand vocational training for the poor and uneducated.
To make that happen, the British government would have to establish a regime of low taxes, light regulations, and favorable treatment toward both skilled and unskilled immigrants working in and around financial services.
Meanwhile, the US financial sector has been lobbying hard to free itself of regulations, so that it can return to its previous, disastrously carefree, ways.
It used its money to buy influence and power, shape U.S. energy policy, and avoid
regulations.
Foreign experts helped draft model legal codes and revised draft laws throughout the Yeltsin era in Russia; outsiders helped craft Ukraine’s postcommunist constitution, the charters for the central bank of Estonia, Poland’s secured transaction regime, and Bulgaria’s securities
regulations.
The IMF endorsed legal standards and codes of best practice developed by other institutions, but also promotes the development of new standards, including accounting and auditing standards, securities market regulations, bankruptcy law, codes for corporate governance, insurance and banking
regulations.
But the same cannot be said for her threat to hit back at the EU by slashing UK taxes and
regulations.
There is little political support for such a move, and stripping away financial
regulations
would breach Britain’s international commitments.
And yet, while Mexico has relatively strong formal land and property rights for indigenous peoples and local communities, those rights have yet to be integrated with other
regulations
– hindering any kind of economic development.
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