Respond
in sentence
1653 examples of Respond in a sentence
It also follows the Arab Peace Initiative, adopted by the Arab League at its Beirut Summit in 2002 (and to which Israel has yet to respond).
To that end, last May, we made available an additional €200 million ($236 million), to be used to
respond
to security challenges, create economic opportunities, and enhance democratic governance.
Freedom, Blasphemy, and ViolencePARIS – Violent attacks on US diplomatic outposts across North Africa and the Middle East have once again raised the question of how to
respond
when Americans and other Westerners engage in provocative expression that others consider blasphemous.
Given that food and energy prices
respond
to monetary developments, and thus are not exogenous, the concept of “core inflation” obviously becomes problematic, to say the least.
In India, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry has established a new “green bond” working group to explore how the country’s debt markets can
respond
to the challenge of financing smart infrastructure.
The question of how to
respond
to growing Chinese assertiveness in the region has divided ASEAN member states more deeply than any previous issue has.
If the Trump administration enacts aggressive policies directed at China, the Chinese will have no choice but to
respond.
As a result, when the next recession comes, the US will lack fiscal space to
respond.
That is why, as Martin Feldstein recently pointed out, the Fed should be “raising the rate when the economy is strong,” thereby giving “the Fed room to
respond
in the next economic downturn with a significant reduction.”
In 2003-2007, the US government pursued fiscal expansion and financial deregulation – an approach that, even at the time, was recognized as likely to constrain the government’s ability to
respond
to a recession.
Academic institutions, research centers, and science-related employers must commit to diversifying their bases of recruitment, and improve efforts to recognize and
respond
to discrimination.
Moreover, through improving cultural competencies (the ability to recognize and
respond
to biases), organizations can create environments that are equitable and physically, spiritually, socially, and emotionally safe for both women and men.
One hopes that its leaders respond, though their fondness for autocratic measures and indulgence of illiberal and intolerant statements by their supporters – behavior that has spurred serious concern across the political spectrum – raises serious doubts that they will.
Investors naturally
respond
to unsustainable debt by selling bonds until interest rates become “ridiculous.”
As it stands, the relevant international institutions – the World Trade Organization and the International Monetary Fund – are not organized to
respond
effectively to possible currency manipulation on their own.
The Fed blames (rightly) foreign central banks that are keeping interest rates too low to prevent their currencies from appreciating against the dollar; but the Fed cannot set policy assuming others
respond
with a theoretical ideal.
This might prod Kim into taking some reckless action – aiming a missile at Guam, for example – to which the US would feel it must
respond
in kind.
There is concern about Russia’s future, how it will use its newfound power, and how the West should
respond.
Faced with this uncertainty about the future of liberal democracy in Russia, how should western countries
respond?
And even if the North could read the Trump administration’s intentions, there is no telling how it would
respond.
After six years of “leading from behind” and drawing meaningless red lines, US President Barack Obama has started to seek out innovative, flexible arrangements – diplomatic and military – to
respond
to global threats.
On its surface, America’s decision to confront Russia recalls previous occasions when Europe proved unable to
respond
to challenges in its neighborhood – most memorably in Bosnia in the 1990s.
In Sub-Saharan Africa, most economies failed to
respond
to the adjustment programs demanded by the IMF and World Bank.
It is harder because the binding constraints on growth are usually country-specific and do not
respond
well to standardized recipes.
Building on the sentiments of his encyclical letter, Laudato Si’, Francis highlighted the international community’s responsibility to
respond
to human suffering, such as that faced by refugees and those living in extreme poverty, and called for global solidarity in order to overcome social exclusion and inequality.
What China’s government is not yet prepared to do is
respond
effectively to increasingly loud demands for political participation – if not democracy – that tend to accompany rising per capita GDP.
The profit motive provides an incentive system to
respond
to the information that prices contain.
And capital markets mobilize resources for activities that are expected to be profitable; those that adequately
respond
to prices.
But organizing the public agencies to
respond
in a coordinated manner, given existing budgetary procedures, is a different matter: the ministry of foreign affairs may not give much importance to tourist visas.
Individuals
respond
to the incentives created by the variety of early-retirement and retirement programs.
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