Regulatory
in sentence
1413 examples of Regulatory in a sentence
Under the current proposal, the absence of a
regulatory
safety net could result, if the weekend restructuring fails, in a global chaotic free-for-all, just like the one that followed the 2008 Lehman Brothers bankruptcy.
That is how Brazil developed a
regulatory
framework that has enabled banks to build a network of 95,000 banking agents.
Other homegrown
regulatory
success stories come from Mexico, Peru, Bolivia, Uganda, South Africa, the Philippines, Thailand, and Mongolia.
Isn’t it possible, then, that rather than causing a Great Depression, significant shrinkage of the financial sector, particularly if facilitated by an improved
regulatory
structure, might actually enhance efficiency and growth?
With little or no
regulatory
supervision in most of the world, companies like Facebook, Google, Amazon, Alibaba, and Tencent used techniques common in propaganda and casino gambling, such as constant notifications and variable rewards, to foster psychological addiction.
The US has no effective
regulatory
framework for Internet platforms, and lacks the political will to create one.
The European Union has both a
regulatory
framework and the necessary political will, but neither is adequate to the challenge.
Recognition of the corrosive effect of platform monopolies on competition and innovation is greater in Europe than in the US, but no one has found an effective
regulatory
strategy.
The OECD demands a smorgasbord of reforms affecting corporate governance, private insurance markets, competition policy, statistics, health, technology, agriculture, and many other
regulatory
areas.
And the problems are not solved with a financial
regulatory
bill entrusting more powers to those regulators.
Because the biggest opportunities lie in spurring faster productivity catch-up by adopting and diffusing today’s best practices, politicians must keep pushing to reduce trade and
regulatory
barriers to market integration and competition.
Finally, rigid labor markets and, more generally,
regulatory
constraints on prices and on the supply response of the economy, deepen recessionary reactions to various shocks, and contribute to the growth of unemployment.
Trump’s senior economic-policy advisers, Peter Navarro and Wilbur Ross (Trump's pick for commerce secretary), argued in a position paper in September that these estimates are flawed, because they don’t take into account “growth-inducing windfalls” from
regulatory
and energy reforms, or the added bonanza that should arise from a sharp narrowing of America’s trade deficit.
After all, this is one way in which
regulatory
capture happens.
After all, from the European Union to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to the North American Free Trade Agreement, we see how geographic regions can create conditions for shared growth and prosperity by removing barriers to commerce, harmonizing
regulatory
norms, opening labor markets, and developing common infrastructure.
This suggests that, for the UK, mega-regional trade agreements – which provide access to multiple markets, but entail lower levels of fiscal and
regulatory
integration than the EU – are the best way forward.
This has stalled progress on many of the issues – including reducing carbon emissions, establishing global financial
regulatory
measures, and concluding the Doha Round of global trade talks, to name a few – that require global attention.
For example, to minimize the risks associated with operating in an unfamiliar
regulatory
and legislative environment, businesses should establish links in advance with a local entity to guide their activities.
To take advantage of these opportunities, however,
regulatory
and political uncertainty must be reduced and public-private partnerships in development finance must be scaled up within a framework that leads to inclusive benefits.
Democratic accountability would also result in
regulatory
diversity – different countries doing their own thing – and that is not a bad thing, either.
Naturally,
regulatory
diversity would require cross-border financial controls to ensure that banks do not evade national regulations by operating from foreign jurisdictions.
To be fair, some reforms – including tax, regulatory, and health-care measures – will help to restore balance without imposing large additional costs on the public sector.
In the democratic countries that have built the market capitalism that dominates the world today, the building blocks of the economy – taxation, public spending, and
regulatory
frameworks – are enacted by the legislature and interpreted by the legal system.
The emergence of such a truly global capitalism – a process that, to be sure, is far from complete – means that markets will no longer be embedded in the politics or
regulatory
systems of various nation-states.
The IMF and the WTO, in particular, have acquired some real
regulatory
authority in macroeconomic and trade policy, respectively.
Far from deepening multilateral structures, he wants to dismantle them, dislodging the global market from the
regulatory
institutions in which it is already only weakly embedded.
Moreover, governments are applying more strictly existing
regulatory
provisions concerning the vetting of takeovers by foreign firms.
If the province were to remain in the EU’s customs and
regulatory
orbit, there would have to be a border in the Irish Sea.
Our analysis of investment deals over the past 18 months shows that public-private partnerships increasingly rely on capital markets to source funds, even as banks rein in lending in order to comply with the
regulatory
provisions set out by the Third Basel Accord.
Liquidity remains limited in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the legacy of which includes a
regulatory
regime that is not conducive to long-term investment.
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