Requiring
in sentence
550 examples of Requiring in a sentence
The Federal Reserve has recently taken a step in that direction by
requiring
that global banks with a significant presence in the US operate there through a holding company that is well-capitalized by US standards.
With French leadership, 2011 offers a golden opportunity for the most important capital markets to adopt clear, precise rules
requiring
full financial disclosure by extractive-industry companies to governmental authorities.
The United States has already passed legislation
requiring
public disclosure of payments to governments, through the 2010 Dodd-Frank law.
With the country desperately short of power, and
requiring
energy to grow, concerned citizens are asking if nuclear is still the answer for India.
An alternative to
requiring
pre-trading disclosure is to adopt a “hands-off” arrangement that leaves executives no discretion over when their equity-based compensation is cashed out.
The two schemes are being carried out under nearly identical conditions –
requiring
the ESM’s approval of a country’s reform program – and neither has been triggered so far.
If marijuana were allowed to be marketed much like alcohol is now, we could expect more problem users than if it were regulated more like pharmaceutical drugs (say, by
requiring
users to be licensed; restricting the number of sales locations, hours of sale, and licensed growers; and imposing high rates of taxation on higher-THC marijuana).
This has undermined the effectiveness of state institutions, increased costs (by
requiring
multiple contractual arrangements), and, in some cases, exacerbated corruption.
Getting the Bank’s role right will be hard work,
requiring
expertise at the top.
Philip Morris is suing Uruguay and Australia for
requiring
warning labels on cigarettes.
In the House of Lords, Lord Mackay of Clashfern, a former Lord Chancellor, moved an amendment
requiring
the bill to distinguish between marriage (same sex) and marriage (opposite sex).
But China also tilted the trade field to its advantage by subsidizing state-owned enterprises, engaging in commercial espionage, and
requiring
foreign firms to transfer their intellectual property to domestic “partners.”
Petroleum independent until 1993, China now consumes more and more imported petroleum every year, and power consumption is predicted to double by 2025,
requiring
an average of one new coal-fired plant to come on line each week.
As might be expected, such a revolution in knowledge must also have a significant societal impact,
requiring
answers to questions that, until recently, were considered pure science fiction.
In December, May lost her first important Brexit battle, when Labour MPs united with 12 Tory rebels to pass an amendment
requiring
a specific Act of Parliament to approve whatever deal is negotiated with the EU.
China is no exception in
requiring
leadership, accountability, and responsiveness as conditions of political stability.
Hard-pressed American households slashed their savings rates, borrowed against their home equity, and increased their debt to maintain consumption, contributing to the housing and credit bubbles that burst in 2008,
requiring
painful deleveraging ever since.
The proposals also clarify Brussels' jurisdiction in relation to national competition authorities: mergers
requiring
a review by three or more national authorities will go automatically to Brussels.
But another course could save the monetary union, without
requiring
members to transfer sovereignty to Brussels: an ex ante exit clause.
Brazil’s “responsibility while protecting” proposal suggests a way forward, by
requiring
all Council members to accept close monitoring and review of any coercive military mandate throughout such a mandate’s lifetime.
In the US, officials hold out hope that the largest financial firms will eventually be forced to comply with a provision of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation
requiring
that they draw up credible “living wills.”
Part of this negotiation apparently would entail a repatriation of powers,
requiring
the consent of all EU members – and making the conditions under which Cameron’s renegotiation is supposed to take place both legally and politically uncertain.
Countries would be better off with policies that promote ICT: elimination of taxes and tariffs on ICT products and services, removal of non-tariff barriers like
requiring
local data storage, and encouragement of digital innovation and transformation in economic sectors through regulatory and procurement reform.
But we quickly become desensitized,
requiring
ever more outrageous scenarios to move us.
Today, any nominee to a position
requiring
Senate confirmation can expect to spend many hours listing past places of residence, attaching tax returns, detailing family members’ campaign contributions, and answering questions about the employment of domestic help or gardening services and whether such employees were legal, tax-paying US residents.
The alternative – allowing the past, in the form of interest payments on the national debt and entitlement spending, to continue dictating fiscal policy – would block prosperity among middle-income households, by
requiring
continuous tax increases and reduced public investment.
In the last three years, the United Nations Security Council has passed ten resolutions
requiring
the Sudanese government to change course and fulfill its obligation to protect its own people.
As we know from environmental regulation, preaching common sense or ethics to bankers will not help; but changing bankers’ incentives – by, say,
requiring
higher equity-asset ratios – would work wonders.
But what more should the US do, beyond reducing the vulnerability of voting machines and
requiring
technology firms to take steps to prevent foreign governments from trying to influence US politics?
And it can help us tackle currently incurable diseases and expand access to credible medical advice, without
requiring
additional medical specialists.
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