Resources
in sentence
5086 examples of Resources in a sentence
Meanwhile, the last Nigerian government, struggling with an economic downturn, failed to mobilize sufficient
resources
– and it was slow to call for international support.
Starved of
resources
and teachers, the system atrophied.
But, as we revitalize Japan’s economy, we need “new” Japanese who shoulder global responsibilities commensurate with their country’s size and economic
resources.
In Germany, restructuring of the SOEs of the former East Germany began soon after reunification and proceeded quickly, due to Chancellor Kohl's political will and the vast financial
resources
lavished on the problem.
They were also drawn into a costly and unwinnable arms race with the United States, and fell victim to imperial overreach, throwing money and
resources
at regimes with little strategic value and long track records of chronic economic mismanagement.
Yet China’s economy is not equipped to generate sufficient
resources
to support the level of spending that victory on this front would require.
All of this will drain the CPC’s limited
resources.
Yet protecting them may merely delay the inevitable, because the longer they are allowed to suck scarce
resources
out of the economy, the more unaffordable an arms race with the US will become – and the greater the challenge to the CPC’s authority will become.
The other type of community is characterized by, first, the redistribution of
resources
among countries and, second, by majority decision-making.
The rise of incompetent states brings about huge challenges: proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism, religious and ethnic strife, rivalry for natural resources, waves of migration, drug trafficking, and deterioration of the environment.
The US endlessly drains its
resources
and energy in Syria and Iraq in the same way that it once did in Vietnam.
But instead of implementing policies aimed at realizing that objective, governments continue not only to subsidize the fossil-fuel industry, but also to use scarce public
resources
to find new reserves.
They did, however, have the right to restrict access to their underground
resources
in order to extract rents, just as the despised agricultural landowners have done for centuries.
Similar stories can be told of other industries, even those that do not require natural
resources
but rely on global value chains instead.
Here, the pivot to the people includes the American people: the dynamism, creativity, and
resources
of American business and non-profit organizations already engaged around the world.
The previously fashionable view that the American seizure of Iraqi oil
resources
would break OPEC and send the price of oil plummeting has turned out to be nonsense.
While there is space for both countries to rise, and while that may benefit the global economy and offer opportunities for other forms of cooperation – for example, on climate change and energy security – the potential for competition for markets, resources, and influence should not be ignored.
One of the developing world's least leveraged
resources
is its human capital working overseas, often in leadership positions in academia and industry.
The results have become increasingly obvious and painful: an economy that has suffered more severely in the global crisis than its neighbors to the south; a rent-seeking business elite that is unaccustomed to competition; public and private monopolies that no one seems to have the political will to dismantle; and corporatist pacts that siphon off public
resources
to unproductive unions, thwarting productivity and growth.
That means helping countries to assess their trade-facilitation needs on a case-by-case basis, match those needs with the
resources
required, and broker partnerships between recipient countries and development allies to ensure that support is provided quickly and efficiently.
Some states lacked the
resources
to pay.
But not only has Obama abandoned Doha; he has also seriously endangered the multilateral trading system by diverting US efforts and
resources
to discriminatory bilateral trade deals and, most recently, to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which will principally aid countries that are worried about an aggressive China and seek political security rather than increased trade.
Doing so also would be one of the most efficient uses of the
resources
that the world dedicates to development.
The G20 countries, which collectively account for most of the world’s population and resources, should lead by translating the SDGs into national policies, and by harnessing government budgets and their private sectors to drive implementation.
Indeed, such
resources
are sufficient to cover projected 2050 electricity needs 22 times over.
Social redistribution of
resources
is a task for the state, and the central state's responsibility in this field must not be diffused.
Because assistance does not rest on federal resources, but rather on the pooling of national resources, creditor states inevitably demand more power in exchange for providing more support to their neighbors.
The UAE enjoys substantial hydrocarbon resources, with oil and gas output accounting for 45% of GDP and 80% of national income, and fueling the country’s economic growth.
The IMF would be using real
resources
to subsidize the market until private market-makers saw it as attractive to provide those services at comparable cost.
It also lay behind early development assistance programs following World War II, when the World Bank and bilateral donors funneled
resources
to newly independent countries to finance large-scale projects.
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