Reporting
in sentence
612 examples of Reporting in a sentence
But
reporting
of just about every other major economic indicator is generally not corrected for inflation.
She was concerned, too, about the health care workers who would have to care for her: “Nurses, who thought they were embarked on a career that had great meaning, find themselves perpetually changing my diapers and
reporting
on the physical changes of an empty husk.”
We would not know about these sales, however, from the Fed’s quarterly report of the Financial Accounts of the US: Around the time official sales commenced, the Fed stopped
reporting
US Treasuries held by foreign official institutions (a series of data that had been available since 1945).
Third, the Paris deal takes steps toward transparency in monitoring, reporting, and verifying countries’ progress.
In other words, the drug-discovery process suffers from built-in inefficiency, owing to inadequate
reporting.
The solutions are too technical for most news
reporting
aimed at the general public.
Throughout the world, standards for
reporting
national-accounts statistics focus attention on a linguistic construct, official debt, rather than on the economically meaningful infinite-horizon fiscal gap, where pension and health-care liabilities exact a heavy toll.
As a result, there is significant demand among Jordan’s young, educated population (two out of five Jordanians have already joined Facebook) for independent news
reporting.
To be sure, there is plenty of inaccurate and disreputable
reporting
on the Internet.
Such censorship carries implications beyond blocking citizens’ access to independent domestic news
reporting.
Yet demographic factors are often neglected in economic reporting, leading to significant distortions in assessments of countries’ performance.
Lately, a new consensus seems to be developing: that emerging-market countries should proceed cautiously with capital market liberalization until they have more of the prerequisites – sound banking systems, proper supervisory structures, and reasonable and transparent accounting and
reporting
systems – in place.
Her
reporting
of the crime brought new recriminations: the member of Parliament for her constituency, Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar, called the rape “a deal gone wrong”; another minister called her experience “a concocted story.”
The girl was burned to death soon after – and some believe as a penalty for –
reporting
the rape.
Incredibly, the Delhi high court took care of one of its own, prohibiting the media from
reporting
on the case.
This dramatic and outrageous gag order – keeping journalists from
reporting
on a matter of public record and a situation that is of the public interest – led to a furious protest by the Editors’ Guild of India against what it called an “unwarranted intrusion into media freedom.”
For many, this was either because producers’ preference for negative stories put them in a bad mood, or because they viewed the
reporting
as politically slanted and therefore untrustworthy.
The international investigation that led to the Panama Papers and the Paradise Papers are brilliant examples of journalism that is relevant and interesting – two fundamental criteria that all
reporting
should meet.
News reporting, as well as political and economic debate, now focuses on identifying the culprits, with bankers and politicians emerging as the prime suspects.
Stock exchanges are placing greater pressure on listed companies to disclose “non-financial” risks, while rules for corporate governance, especially in accounting and reporting, are becoming more demanding.
Transparency will have to be improved, through better corporate
reporting
and enhanced disclosure from financial institutions.
The BEPS initiative introduced a system for
reporting
corporate profits and taxes paid on a country-by-country basis, and for facilitating exchange of information among countries.
One problem is that, with print advertising in terminal decline, media companies are finding it harder to subsidize the long-term research that in-depth
reporting
typically requires.
Yet, by identifying and bringing to the fore issues that may influence political agendas and public life for years to come, the impact of such
reporting
can be enormous.
Yes, media organizations must find ways to finance worthwhile reporting, investigation, and analysis.
But we have also come to realize that far too many efforts to fulfill global commitments lack the meaningful
reporting
mechanisms needed to succeed.
Without data, transparency, and adequate
reporting
on gender disparities, there can be no progress toward gender equality.
Imagine how you would feel about investing if every article you read were only about stocks that did poorly, with no
reporting
on the big successes.
As I conducted my reporting, I heard woman after woman allege that the same professor or the same fraternity had engaged in multiple instances of assault or harassment.
Some feminists have attacked me for this position, but the numbers bear me out: thirty years ago, 30% of reported rapes in the US and the United Kingdom resulted in prosecutions; today, after three decades of confidential sex-crime reporting, the number is 12% in the US and 6% in the UK.
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