Relying
in sentence
507 examples of Relying in a sentence
Instead of
relying
on fads emanating from abroad, we need to experiment and look for the unique solutions that will allow us to circumvent ingrained social structures that inhibit growth.
In believing that Assad would be easily overthrown, the US – not for the first time – was
relying
on its own propaganda.
But, for a country that has had little faith in deterrence when it comes to existential nuclear threats,
relying
on it now would mark a new, uncomfortable bet.
To be sure, Obama had some good reasons for
relying
on drones.
This model presupposes that China will develop domestic capital, rather than simply
relying
on foreign investment.
Scrutiny of the formal reasoning that establishes the theorem shows that
relying
only on the preference rankings of individuals makes it difficult to distinguish between very dissimilar social choice problems.
The status quo allows banks instead to leverage taxpayer assistance by holding razor-thin equity margins,
relying
on debt to a far greater extent than typical large non-financial firms do.
Imagine that Sachs’s Millennium Villages project had known the sequence of all previous successful moves out of subsistence agriculture, rather than
relying
only on guesswork or deduction.
Moreover, even under the most optimistic scenario, the US and the world will still be
relying
mainly on conventional fossil fuels until the hydrocarbon era comes to an end (which few of us will live to see).
Already, the US Federal Reserve,
relying
on its contacts in the domestic business community, has warned that corporate investment plans could be “scaled back or postponed” because of uncertainty over global trade relations.
Kaufman’s lasting legacy will be a simple and powerful idea that reasonable people increasingly find to be self-evident:
relying
on deregulation and self-interest in today’s complex, opaque markets will manifestly fail to produce a reasonable allocation of capital or support entrepreneurship and growth.
The World Health Organization’s Special Program for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases has called upon regulatory agencies to emphasize “science-based, case-by-case targeted requirements with a degree of practical parsimony,” instead of
relying
on “a precautionary approach that can require data to address all theoretical risks.”
Furthermore, the study shows that
relying
on assumptions that are more in sync with the consensus economic outlook implies a deficit of 1.7-4% of GDP by 2027, with debt at 72-83% of GDP.
After years of
relying
on America’s presence in the region, playing an advantageous waiting game, China’s next leaders may embrace a more active role.
Most US embassies ensure a constant stream of tweets by
relying
on public-diplomacy officers to get the word out about what the ambassador is doing day by day, even hour by hour.
It has achieved this with precious few resources and by
relying
on its many hundreds of scientists to give their time to work on the reports voluntarily.
Yet, in the aftermath of the global economic crisis, China insisted on maintaining extremely high growth rates of 9% for two years, by
relying
on fiscal stimulus, huge liquidity injections, and a temporary halt in the renminbi’s appreciation.
Relying
on market mechansims alone cannot solve the problems of women.
A third ingredient of fossil-fuel flimflam is so-called clean coal, often
relying
on carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies.
Relying
on market fundamentalism has continued to marginalize three billion people, seriously damaged the environment, and widened the economic divisions in even the richest of countries.
As the South African finance minister, Pravin Gordhan, explained, “to sustain the growth rates we need to create jobs, we have no choice but to build new generating capacity –
relying
on what, for now, remains our most abundant and affordable energy source: coal.”
Moreover, even congressional Republicans who have distanced themselves from Trump’s more extreme statements – some even before his inadequate response to the violence at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia – still support his main policy proposals, and are
relying
on him to sign conservative legislation that Obama vetoed.
With the developing world
relying
almost totally on innovation from the rich countries, many of the most pressing problems that are unique to poorer countries remain neglected by the world's scientists and leading high-technology industries.
Rather than
relying
mainly on income taxation, as in the US, the Nordic countries rely on value-added taxation, which provides a relatively high amount of revenue with relatively low rates of evasion and few distortions to the economy.
No news story that day discussed economic fundamentals or gave a clear indication of the cause of the decline,
relying
instead on sensational prose – “the house that Jack built threatened to topple over” and “traders were quaking in their boots.”
Agriculture Minister Luca Zaia has gone so far as to argue that relating salaries to the cost of living in different regions will force the south to be self-sufficient and stop
relying
on help from the north.
But it took a shortcut,
relying
on counter-cyclical fiscal and monetary policies to boost growth.
One is
relying
on Chinese goodwill to stabilize the US and world economies.
Rather than
relying
on cutting a few tons of incredibly overpriced CO2 now, we need to invest in research and development aimed at innovating down the cost of green energy in the long run, so that everyone will switch.
Indeed, few governments have submitted remotely realistic budget projections, typically
relying
on overly rosy economic scenarios.
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