Regulatory
in sentence
1413 examples of Regulatory in a sentence
These breakthroughs, we need to move those at full speed, and we can measure that in terms of companies, pilot projects,
regulatory
things that have been changed.
So, having seen this, and having worried about it for eight years, the first thing I do is pick up my phone and ask our marketing and
regulatory
guys, call AARP, get an appointment right away.
It requires creating a
regulatory
framework for the gathering, using and sharing of personal health data that's at the same time stringent and sensible.
But there are indications that the process is being driven by
regulatory
change, and in some cases by
regulatory
protectionism.
There is no international
regulatory
authority for financial markets, and there is not enough international cooperation for the taxation of capital.
A TTIP with wider
regulatory
convergence could facilitate a significant increase in trade.
Such a mechanism is already envisioned in the TTIP, in a proposed chapter on
regulatory
cooperation, but in an indefinite and limited way.
Likewise, while there are green shoots of insurance-industry growth in regions like Sub-Saharan Africa, global insurers must constantly adapt to
regulatory
changes in their primary or home markets, and it is unclear if they have the capacity to expand meaningfully into low-income countries.
To develop its platform, Alibaba relied on big data to manage the fund’s unique liquidity dynamics; and it benefited from China’s unsettled
regulatory
framework, though this could change in the future.
That faith underlies the JOBS (Jumpstart Our Business Startups) Act, a new law that will make it easier for small companies to raise money and bypass the
regulatory
“friction” that firms encounter when they go public.
Paradoxically, the scandals themselves have highlighted America's strong
regulatory
system.
If anything, they are evidence not of widespread corruption, but of the vigilance of US
regulatory
authorities--which is precisely why the cases now in the news are the exception rather than the rule.
Similarly,
regulatory
agencies are now better equipped to deal with financial irregularities.
Investors also see that the US
regulatory
system is stronger than the SEC alone.
So investors know that even if a Federal agency like the SEC overlooks or ignores serious
regulatory
problems, another regulator might step in.
Many EU initiatives – from financial and
regulatory
harmonization to gender equality – make good sense.
But if they are to survive Europe’s crises, they must be supported by timely political decision-making, familiar
regulatory
frameworks across member states, and an EU-wide commitment to good governance and ethics.
The only practical way forward is for the Chinese authorities to focus on
regulatory
and institutional development, while following through on their commitment to allow markets to play the decisive role in allocating resources.
Strong US leadership is required to push the WTO in this direction while avoiding an EU-style future
(regulatory
overload) or a UN-style future (an irrelevant talking shop).
While some restrictions on banks will be imposed in the wake of the financial crisis, we will not see a return to severe
regulatory
constraints on banks’ activities.
Some of those
regulatory
changes may be reversed, but Britain is unlikely to jeopardize an important component of its economy by returning to pre-Thatcher financial rules.
And China’s government must take steps to enable market forces to play a greater role in directing economic activity, including by reducing licensing and
regulatory
requirements in the private sector.
Notwithstanding his constant bragging about deregulation, the total economic impact of his
regulatory
repeals has been trivial relative to the size of the economy.
Despite the fractured nature of India’s coalition politics and the country’s arcane
regulatory
framework, successive governments have launched and expanded myriad programs to improve educational opportunities for children.
If banks are regulated at the national level, but do business internationally, national
regulatory
authorities have a permanent incentive to set lax standards to avoid driving business to other countries and to lure it from them instead.
Prior to the crisis,
regulatory
authorities focused mainly on removing barriers to trading, and generally favored measures that made markets more complete by fostering faster, cheaper trading of a wider variety of financial claims.
Phrases like “sand in the machine” and “grit in the oyster,” which were pejorative in the prelapsarian days of 2006, are now used to support
regulatory
or fiscal changes that may slow down trading and reduce its volume.
Without more sophisticated arguments, they might well find themselves submerged under a pile of
regulatory
sandbags.
Similarly,
regulatory
opacity – and, more broadly, uncertainty about the direction of economic policy – has discouraged investment.
Some of the losers have the means to defend their interests: purged officials, companies, and industries that face new
regulatory
scrutiny, as well as firms forced out of business, have well-placed friends within China’s enormous bureaucracy.
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