Resilient
in sentence
445 examples of Resilient in a sentence
But McCain has shown himself to be
resilient.
But in the longer term, reducing its reliance on foreign trade and imported technologies will leave China stronger, more resilient, and possibly less willing to acquiesce to US-designed rules.
For one thing, China is more economically
resilient
to the effects of a trade war than it used to be.
Secure land tenure is thus vital to building the inclusive, resilient, and sustainable communities that will propel economic and social progress well into the future.
Colombia’s Gift to the WorldMADRID – After four long years of talks in Havana, Cuba, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos has negotiated an end to successive governments’ armed conflict with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the most
resilient
insurgent group in Latin America.
The country, too, may prove equally surprising and
resilient.
Indeed, the IMF’s own research shows that countries that deployed capital controls first – or alongside a host of other macroprudential measures – were among the most
resilient
during the global financial crisis.
New technologies could even enable mini-grid providers to develop entirely new organizational models for electricity systems that are more effective and
resilient
than the conventional utility-based approach.
This would help markets become more self-sufficient and resilient, thereby enhancing financial stability and providing support for economic recovery.
We need agricultural systems that are more
resilient
to climate change, and that can contribute to mitigating it.
This means that when we build a road in a country like Mozambique, we are also ensuring that it is
resilient
to the floods that accompany incessant rains.
We must remain patient, resilient, and united, within our communities and countries – and also as Europeans.
What advanced societies need now are social compacts that are
resilient
to demographic shifts, technological disruptions, and economic shocks.
Radical proposals that would help restore a more
resilient
system, offered by the likes of Governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King, have been smothered by noisy discussion of measures that do nothing to address modern banking’s fundamental defects.
With a reliable support structure and adequate economic opportunity, households – and, in turn, countries – become more
resilient.
Such an arrangement would resemble what Anne-Marie Slaughter and Mira Rapp-Hooper have called “mesh networks,” which “are highly resilient, because no individual node is critical to the structure’s survival – even if one link breaks, the structure survives.”
Japan’s enhanced security ties with Vietnam and other like-minded Asian countries (such as Australia, the Philippines, Singapore, and India), may lead to the emergence of such a
resilient
network, which can serve as a vital hedge against declining US commitment to the region.
Mesh networks are highly resilient, because no individual node is critical to the structure’s survival – even if one link breaks, the structure survives.
If they take the right steps, America’s Asian allies may emerge from the Trump era more
resilient
and secure than ever.
But does the Chinese government really have the tools needed to keep its economy so
resilient?
Given these findings, the 2015 report advises national, regional, and international progressive groups to support the forces of emancipation, which hold the key to finding homegrown solutions to the challenges of ensuring better governance, more productive economies, and more
resilient
societies.
Indeed, some argue that the inventiveness and internationalism of a world networked by interests and shared causes is likely to be more
resilient
than one crammed into the artificial – and increasingly constraining – box of the national state.
And yet, despite the growing evidence to the contrary, the assumption that all capital flows are beneficial has proved remarkably
resilient.
Yet emerging economies, once considered much more vulnerable, have been remarkably
resilient.
The region does not need new borders and new protectorates, but rather better states, built to be
resilient
against ethnic divisions and less vulnerable to external influence.
But the economy, so far, has proved resilient, though as we head into this week’s snap general election, there are signs that higher inflation is taking its toll on consumers and some businesses.
A solid middle class has yet to emerge, nor a
resilient
civil society.
Counterproductive and excessive fiscal austerity at the federal level has dampened growth this year, but the private sector has proved more
resilient
than expected.
After all, households that are saving twice as much as previously suspected should be expected to be more
resilient
when confronted with rising interest rates.
To help the most vulnerable communities become more
resilient
to the effects of climate change, financial institutions should support small and medium-size enterprises.
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