Requires
in sentence
3382 examples of Requires in a sentence
But ensuring that those children can one day contribute meaningfully to Haiti
requires
improving conditions for doing business.
EDH is insolvent and
requires
an annual subsidy of $200 million, or one-tenth of Haiti’s entire budget.
Economic (and political) logic
requires
that the eurozone will soon also need a common bank rescue fund.
But that is often the way that European integration proceeds: an incomplete step in one area later
requires
further steps in related areas.
This global crisis
requires
a global response, but, unfortunately, responsibility for responding remains at the national level.
Of course, Europe will also have to encourage entrepreneurship, which
requires
fostering a culture of risk-taking, facilitating access to venture capital, and investing in strong educational institutions.
In the face of today’s political disruptions, responsive leadership
requires
that we address all forms of inequality.
Regardless of what Greece does, eurozone banks now need to be rapidly recapitalized, which
requires
a new EU-wide program of direct capital injections.
To understand how this plays out
requires
a rigorous new development paradigm.
Cuban Time TravelHAVANA – For a United States citizen, the short trip to Havana
requires
navigating an obstacle course, owing to the trade and travel embargo that the US maintains against Cuba.
TaskRabbit, which subcontracts household jobs like assembling Ikea furniture,
requires
participants to pay a minimum wage, and has launched an insurance scheme to protect its US workers.
The most important decision that Israel’s new government is likely to face, when the time comes, is whether the country’s well being and even survival
requires
acting decisively against Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Disbursing more than 20% of the credits available to a country still
requires
that it first reach an agreement with the IMF, and 20% of a country’s entitlement is actually less than it contributes to the pool.
But making this vision a reality
requires
further bold thinking.
To achieve that goal, Russia
requires
not just the absence of confrontation with the US, but a genuinely strong and deep relationship with the world's sole superpower.
Increasing the quantity, quality, availability, and usability of data for development
requires
addressing the market failures that lead to gaps in data use and coverage in developing countries.
Long-term stability
requires
both political inclusion and equal access to economic opportunities.
It also
requires
specifying a common date for ratification (through simultaneous referenda or parliamentary votes) for all countries that have not yet done so, including France and the Netherlands.
Resolving these semi-dormant wars
requires
stepped-up political involvement, economic engagement, and a willingness to provide Western peacekeeping forces and monitors if and when they are needed.
But reform
requires
the continuation of the peace and security that is the bequest of US leadership.
Like every financial crisis enabled by unsustainable economic policies, finding a way out
requires
both immediate and medium-term remedies.
“Giving confidence” to this sort of customer
requires
the capacity to provide quick, automatic, meaningful, and front-loaded financial support; otherwise, accumulating reserves and pooling them in regional agreements will still look like a more reliable option.
To rewrite the plot before that scenario plays out
requires
reshuffling and revitalizing US politics, so that, in the words of the poet Seamus Heaney, “hope and history rhyme” once again in America.
This
requires
a more supportive regulatory environment, technical assistance, as well as connections to suppliers, distributors, and finance providers.
Today, this
requires
opposition to any Mubarak-style repression of the Muslim Brotherhood.
It
requires
a person.
The address also embraced social welfare (“The commitments we make to each other through Medicare and Medicaid and Social Security, these things do not sap our initiative, they strengthen us”) and the idea of fraternité (“preserving our individual freedoms ultimately
requires
collective action”).
A peaceful resolution of deep-rooted problems
requires
wise political leadership, as well as recognition that past injustices cannot be redressed all at once.
Progress
requires
identifying errors, which in turn calls for heterodox thinking.
Competition
requires
redundancy – three or four firms competing to accomplish the same task or deliver the same product, outdoing one another and ultimately advancing the market.
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