Report
in sentence
3145 examples of Report in a sentence
In fact, the value of assets held by such funds fluctuates, and it is only an accounting convention – permitted by regulators – that allows them to
report
a stable value.
Nor, apart from a largely ignored National Human Rights Commission
report
in 2012, has there been any significant domestic truth-finding, let alone a reconciliation process or reparations.
In mathematics and science, PISA’s latest
report
card puts Asia at the head of the class, with China, Singapore, and South Korea on top.
Fortunately, according to a recent
report
by the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI), digital technologies – starting with mobile phones – can rapidly fix this problem and foster faster, more inclusive growth.
A
report
for the Chair of the EU Commission by a team of experts led by Jacques Sapir argued explicitly for a reorientation of the Union's "cohesion" policies eastwards, i.e. , in favor of those who most need them.
One
report
by a Korean research institute shows that the Korean economy will slip into recession if the yen-dollar exchange rate nears 118, its average level back in 2007.
But there in the FOMC’s mid-September 2008 report, many members express self-congratulation for having found the strength to take the incomprehensible decision not to bail out Lehman Brothers.
As a
report
from UNESCO recently highlighted, China, which now spends more than $100 billion annually (2.5% of GDP) on R&D, is on the verge of surpassing the US and Europe in terms of the number of researchers.
If she does
report
the matter to the authorities, the case will almost certainly never be properly investigated, nor the perpetrators ever prosecuted.
While the Bank’s annual report, released in September, talks of a commitment to “researching today’s most pressing topics,” trade is not among them.
The regulation’s impact could be bolstered by two other proposals: automatic exchange of tax information among jurisdictions and a requirement that multinationals
report
revenues on a country-by-country basis.
For example, when initial reports surfaced about the first swine flu cases, it took three weeks for the information to reach federal health authorities, because state governments were reluctant to
report
cases quickly due to political and electoral considerations.
A
report
from the National Assembly Defense Commission indicates that 50% of the population possesses arms legally or illegally.
My former Harvard colleague and leading US diplomat Robert Blackwill and former State Department adviser Ashley Tellis expressed their unease in a
report
published last year.
The US must respond to the allegations – first leveled in a
report
published by the German magazine Der Spiegel – and give a proper accounting of its actions.
Some 8% of the members of the National Association of Manufacturers
report
having trouble filling positions vacated by retirees.
In a
report
published last December, the European Commission’s European Political Strategy Center predicted that ever-more frequent droughts and floods will “dwarf all other drivers of migration,” with as many as one billion people displaced globally by 2050.
Even the lowest estimate of 25 million climate-change migrants, the
report
warns, “would dwarf the current levels of new refugees and internally displaced persons.”
The most spectacular recent example of this is a
report
issued this summer by the Government Accountability Office.
The GAO responded by producing a deeply muddled
report
that followed the financial industry’s suggestion of focusing almost exclusively on the difference in bond spreads (interest rates on various forms of financing) between the largest banks and some of their competitors.
The GAO
report
also refers to the Dodd-Frank financial reforms of 2010, including the requirement that large bank holding companies create “living wills.”
Sadly for the GAO, shortly after their
report
appeared, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation rejected the most recent living wills as completely inadequate – meaning that there is still no road map for handling the failure of a very large bank.
In a
report
submitted to the finance ministers and central bank governors gathered in Bali, the group argues that it should be possible for countries to benefit from international capital flows without risking excessive market volatility and crises.
The
report
begins by recognizing that emerging economies should deepen their domestic financial markets.
The
report
also proposes an enhanced global surveillance mechanism.
Most crucially, the
report
calls for an enhanced global financial safety net to ensure that countries are well protected against excessive capital-flow volatility and self-fulfilling financial market panics.
In 2006, the
report
shows, 90% of available resources came from the IMF.
Moreover, these new financing mechanisms “have not been crisis tested,” according to the report, “are subject to conditions prevailing in providing countries,” and “do not cover several systemically significant” economies.
The
report
shows how; now we need the political will to make change possible.
Nor does the Russian economy’s contraction and the expected deepening of poverty (the World Bank’s
report
released in late June was grimmer about Russia than its previous report) presage an immediate catastrophe.
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