Require
in sentence
3837 examples of Require in a sentence
Withdrawing from the EU will
require
uprooting a thicket of complex legal and institutional frameworks, around which most political norms and conventions revolve.
It would not
require
a headline deficit of below 3% of GDP in each and every year, in each and every country.
But it would
require
a more sophisticated analytical framework than the current one, which merely distinguishes between countries on the basis of whether they meet the EU’s 60%-of-GDP ceiling on public debt.
They
require
other social institutions to support them.
Sometimes, this will
require
extending institutions outward from nation states and strengthening global governance.
But Paul Lever, a former British ambassador to Germany, offers a more pointed answer: Berlin Rules is the title of his new book, in which he writes, “Modern Germany has shown that politics can achieve what used to
require
war.”
The long-term effect of the Obama Doctrine will
require
more time to assess, but, as he approaches the November election, Obama appears to have an edge over his opponent in foreign policy.
Effective negotiations
require
a deep understanding of the other side’s interests, priorities, and constraints.
A final deal will almost certainly take much longer, not least because parts of it will
require
ratification by individual member states.
Now more than ever, securing a deal will
require
shifting to a collaborative, outward-looking, and realistic negotiating strategy.
The transition to a cleaner future will
require
both government action and the right incentives for the private sector.
Indeed, Greece might ultimately
require
more than €400 billion in official support – almost 200% of its GDP today.
Prosperity and growth, security and stability, and the long-term sustainability of our societies
require
the promotion of our interests and values abroad, and engagement with external threats and global challenges.
Nonetheless, transforming traditional ways of living in China will
require
more than hortatory rhetoric.
What is certain is that the outcome of the European Parliament election is bad news for supporters of deeper EU integration, which would
require
shifting more power from the member states to the supranational level, and for supporters of further EU enlargement.
The paramount task is to concentrate on a broad, and long-overdue, reform agenda that includes solutions that are both simple to achieve and do not
require
changes to the European treaties.
The first change would be to prohibit imports of genetically modified feed, and
require
that farmers produce at least half of their animal feed on their own farms.
Bringing the world’s two billion unbanked people out of the shadows and into the mainstream financial system will
require
new partnerships among regulators, the private sector, non-profits, regional bodies, and international organizations.
Many of the good-governance agenda’s key goals – empowerment, inclusion, participation, integrity, transparency, and accountability – can be built into workable solutions, not because outsiders demand them, but because effective solutions
require
them.
Bringing this about will
require
actions that go beyond the competence of the Commissioner for Enlargement.
There is a simple fix to this problem –
require
money-market funds to show the actual floating value of their assets, so that everyone understands that it is not a fixed number.
It will
require
a mix of forward-looking policymaking, agile regulatory frameworks, and, above all, effective partnerships across organizational and national boundaries.
And boosting net exports will
require
a weaker dollar to make US products more attractive to foreign buyers and foreign goods more expensive to US buyers, implying a loss in Americans’ standard of living.
Educational reforms will likely
require
a generation or more to bear fruit.
Responsible use will
require
adequate economic incentives.
Restoring growth, opportunity, prosperity, and financial stability will
require
bold solutions to five inter-related problems.
And enlarging the EFSF to an appropriate size would
require
massive additional French borrowing, which could well place France itself at the receiving end of a speculative attack.
Automation is bound to increase profits, because machines that make human labor redundant
require
no wages and only minimal investment in maintenance.
That will
require
more use of the soft power of attraction rather than relying so heavily on hard military power, as the Bush administration has done.
Achieving these goals will require, first and foremost, that China’s leadership understands where in the development process China is.
Back
Next
Related words
Would
Which
Their
Countries
Political
Global
Economic
Other
Government
Change
Public
Policy
International
Investment
Support
Policies
Governments
Could
Growth
Economy