Regulations
in sentence
1305 examples of Regulations in a sentence
SOE managers can credibly argue that heavy
regulations
place them at a competitive disadvantage, and that the tech giants are eating their lunch by free-riding on state-administered telecommunication, transportation, and financial channels.
By following an eloquent survivor of the Parkland massacre, 1.66 million Twitter users have signaled their support for stronger gun-control regulations, and their opposition to the US gun lobby.
Regions must be prevented from promulgating
regulations
that violate national laws or impose negative effects on other regions, as has happened with the creation by some regions of internal trade barriers.
No one should be surprised that so contemptuous a French attitude, one utterly disdainful of the Union's Solidarity Pact and competition regulations, provoked a reaction detrimental to France.
The likelihood that Trump will ease
regulations
and cut taxes has pumped oxygen into US markets, and many business leaders are confident that economic growth is on the horizon.
It remains to be seen how digital trade
regulations
will fare under the TTIP, which Trump has suggested he might revive.
And the CEOs’ good hearts are apparently all that is needed to ensure that the environment is protected, even without relevant
regulations.
Without effective
regulations
and a real price to pay for polluting, there is no reason whatsoever to believe that they will behave differently than they have.
Without technology-friendly
regulations
and public policies, no amount of donations or technical training will make much of a difference.
It is irrelevant whether Internet
regulations
that fail to promote competition and protect consumers are passed by governments afraid of freely flowing information or, as in the case of the jailed entrepreneur, in order to protect established companies.
Among other things, it increased transparency for derivatives, raised capital requirements for financial institutions, imposed additional
regulations
on “systemically important” institutions, and, per the suggestion of Senator Elizabeth Warren, established the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).
The EU’s
regulations
are perhaps the strongest suite of measures to stop illicitly caught fish from entering the market.
Another major concern is that, if businesses are no longer able to “grease the wheels” – that is, bribe officials to allow them to circumvent excessive
regulations
– their performance could suffer.
The role of politics is to elect majorities that can abolish
regulations
and regulatory bodies.
As is frequently pointed out, unless banking
regulations
are identical across frontiers, there will be plenty of scope for “regulatory arbitrage.”
As most countries have started making serious investments in renewable energy, and many are implementing carbon prices and regulations, critics complain that such policies may undermine growth.
Rules and
regulations
in most states protect the two parties that have held sway in US politics for more than a century.
During the early transition years, the lack of an effective monetary-policy framework reflected the challenge of establishing new institutions and regulations, as well as the difficulty of overcoming the legacy of central planning, under which budget and credit financing were indistinguishable.
Policymakers there know that governments have a role in mandating
regulations
to create a level playing field and helping build industry capacity.
His orders would rescind the Clean Power Plan
regulations
of the US Environmental Protection Agency; roll back standards to control methane releases from oil and gas production and distribution; and end the regulatory use of a “social cost of carbon,” introduced by the EPA to calibrate the dollar value of climate damage caused by the emission of an additional ton of carbon dioxide.
The consultation processes on rules and
regulations
were highly structured, and much effort was devoted to ensuring balanced representations from providers and users of financial services.
Pan Yue, vice-director of the State Environmental Protection Administration, recently argued in a China Daily article in favor of stronger emissions
regulations
and a more “green-oriented China,” warning that “China’s image among the international community” was in jeopardy.
The political backlash that ensued from the bail-in triggered a blame game between the government and the opposition parties, and even between politicians and regulators, with all blaming the European Union and its banking
regulations.
But if the world is serious about achieving these shared goals, an effective mechanism for financing them must be established, supported by well-designed
regulations
that create the right incentives.
In fact, it would be a mistake for Japan to roll back its environmental regulations, or its health and safety
regulations.
But many areas in which reform is needed, such as hiring practices, require change in private-sector conventions, not government
regulations.
The starting point should be the weaknesses of the euro area’s rules and
regulations.
That means improved rules and
regulations
that place greater emphasis on crisis prevention than on crisis management.
Trump’s tax and spending plans will sharply reverse the budget consolidation enforced by Congress on Barack Obama’s administration, and household borrowing will expand dramatically if Trump fulfills his promise to reverse the bank
regulations
imposed after the 2008 financial crisis.
It may have been a singular occurrence that reflected a variety of factors, including the euro crisis; continued economic weakness in many European countries; the sharp decline in commodity prices; dramatic slowdowns in Brazil, Russia, and other emerging economies; and tighter
regulations
for international banks, which might have hindered trade finance.
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