Report
in sentence
3145 examples of Report in a sentence
A striking 85% of large Dutch firms
report
innovative activities, while more than 50% of all firms are “innovation active.”
Therefore, let me first present my anticorruption credentials: as Deputy Prime Minister in 1999 I was the first Polish politician to ask the World Bank to prepare a
report
on corruption in Poland and ways to eradicate it.
Another undercover
report
by CBS News interviewed a 12-year-old girl who obtained a factory job using a certificate that falsified her age.
When Economic History Improves With TimeCAMBRIDGE – Seldom does a dense
report
from a statistical agency take your breath away, but the latest publication on the United States’ national income accounts from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) is the exception that proves the rule.
The
report
requires economists to revise our view of the US economy.
In 1989, a United States National Research Council report, Improving Risk Communication, recommended that one-way communication from experts to non-experts be replaced with an “interactive process of exchange of information and opinion.”
The
report
suggested that risk communication is successful only if those involved are satisfied that they are adequately informed about the relevant issues, given the limits of available knowledge.
The committee that drafted the
report
– now known as the Delors Report, after its chairman, Jacques Delors – was a fundamentally rather conservative group of central bankers, with even the governor of the Bank of England (BoE) signing on.
At the time of his report, he concluded that the European budget would amount to some 3% of GDP – identical to the peacetime US federal budget’s share of GDP during the country’s first stage of monetary union, in the nineteenth century.
Indeed, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon criticized Iran for not assuring the world that it is not seeking nuclear arms at a time when the International Atomic Energy Agency has published a new
report
suggesting that it is.
According to a recent World Health Organization (WHO) report, diabetes killed 1.5 million people in 2012, about the same number as TB.
In fact, the impact of NCDs is especially acute in low- and middle-income countries; according to the WHO report, more than 80% of diabetes-related deaths occur outside high-income countries.
As Refugees International observes: “The government is more likely to take action against those who
report
and document rape than those who commit it.”
Consider some of the figures provided by the McKinsey Global Institute’s recent
report
Digital America.
In its 2015 mid-year report, the agency put the number of “forcibly displaced” people worldwide at 59.5 million at the end of 2014, including 19.5 million internationally displaced, which they define as true refugees.
The
report
noted that the total number had certainly grown substantially since.
Unfortunately, the
report
underscores the incompleteness of our understanding of the refugee problem.
For starters, the absence of dedicated funding is impeding implementation of long-term prevention strategies in many countries; a new World Bank
report
finds that only six countries, including the United States, have taken the threat seriously.
And long-term solutions such as establishing and connecting bio-surveillance systems should be expanded and strengthened, to enable public-health professionals around the world to track and
report
human and animal diseases and plan defenses together.
In Mexico, a recent
report
published by the magazine Nexos estimated organized crime’s total “rent” at $8 billion per year – a small portion of total profits, but enough to buy off underpaid cops, bribe corrupt public officials, and influence local economies.
A recent
report
from George Soros’s Open Society Foundations that parses the past decade of US defense spending in Central Asia found that, in 2007 alone, the US provided $145 million in military aid to the region.
The
report
concludes that “the US military has acquired an oversized impact on US foreign policy in Central Asia.”
The most confrontational recent articulation of this position can be found in a
report
for the Council on Foreign Relations, by Robert Blackwill and Ashley Tellis, arguing that the central objective of American grand strategy must be “preserving US primacy in the global system,” and urging a series of aggressive economic, political, and military measures to “balance” China.
In a new
report
for the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Kevin Rudd, former Australian Prime Minister and now head of the Asia Society Policy Institute, outlines just such a strategy, which he calls “constructive realism”.
As the Economic Commission for Africa concluded in its recent report: “Civil society and the media have increased their voice and power in the last decade of democratic reforms.”
The Financial Stability Board (FSB), headed by Mario Draghi, publicly stated in its September 2009
report
to the G-20 that it was studying contingent capital proposals.
A recent Brookings Institution
report
estimates that, “Individuals in a high-tax state and with short-term capital gains can avoid $7.50 in taxes for each $100 they invest, even before considering any return on their Zone investments.”
We are two years away from the first major
report
to gauge progress under the Paris agreement.
The first, the US Census Bureau’s annual income and poverty report, shows that, despite the economy’s supposed recovery from the Great Recession, ordinary Americans’ incomes continue to stagnate.
The UNDP
report
emphasizes another aspect of societal performance: vulnerability.
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