Response
in sentence
4470 examples of Response in a sentence
This
response
is understandably controversial, because it rewards those who bet on risky assets, many of whom accepted risk with open eyes and bear some responsibility for causing the crisis.
In response, other opposition parties, the traditional Croat Peasant Party (HSS), the center-left Liberal Party (LS), the populist Croat National Party (HNS), and the regionalist Istrian Democratic Assembly (IDS), formed their own coalition (the Four).
The decision to establish the EU was an ingenious
response
to the biggest challenge of the day – war and conflict.
Indeed, fearful of the populists’ power, in or out of government, the
response
from mainstream conservatives – and even some social democrats – to their illiberal views has already been inexcusably soft.
Our first glimpse of the trouble in coordinating an international
response
to the financial crisis came last November, during the emergency G-20 summit in Washington.
However frightening the global recession, a coordinated and coherent
response
to it by the world’s political leaders remains highly uncertain at best.
In the aftermath of 9/11, there was a good deal of sympathy and understanding around the world for America’s military
response
against the Taliban.
In
response
to this growing resentment, both parties’ presidential candidates have promised to reestablish economic fairness and reform the tax system.
The first
response
can be described as realist: no matter who governs in America, concrete results need to be achieved.
In contrast to the Clinton era, under Bush the US Treasury Secretary was closer to industry than to banks, and so America’s
response
to Argentina’s default was notably more tolerant than probably would have been true had it occurred during the Clinton administration.
Efforts to control TB and NCDs – which, like HIV/AIDS, place a heavy burden on low- and middle-income countries – can leverage the lessons learned from the
response
to HIV.
First, as the global AIDS
response
expanded, it faced the dual challenge of including hard-to-reach communities while continuing to support a growing number of patients receiving treatment.
In response, HIV programs have evolved to offer services shaped by the preferences of patients.
For example, the “90-90-90” targets set by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) – in which 90% of people living with HIV have been diagnosed, 90% of those diagnosed with HIV are on treatment, and 90% of those on treatment are virally suppressed – helped focus the global AIDS
response.
While the TB
response
has leveraged strategic partnerships to expand coverage, large gaps remain, the largest being treatments for children and patients with drug-resistant TB.
Best of all, with the AIDS
response
blueprint already in hand, there is no need to reinvent the wheel.
Though the ideal long-term
response
would be for the world to eliminate all greenhouse-gas emissions by the end of the century, we must confront the immediate challenges of protecting the planet’s most vulnerable populations.
The focus has been on Europe’s
response
to the events that began in Tunisia and have since led to the fall of Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak, unrest in Bahrain and Yemen, and now civil conflict in Libya.
I was most fascinated, though, by the difference in legislators’
response
to inequality now and in the past.
In response, pharmaceutical companies and policymakers are looking for innovative ways to reduce these pressures, not just by developing new drugs, but also by rethinking how the industry operates.
Mainstream economics offers a straightforward analysis of and policy
response
to such a transformation.
China’s recent heavy-handed economic sanctioning of South Korea, in
response
to that country’s decision to deploy the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-missile system, was just the latest example of the Chinese authorities’ use of trade as a political weapon.
Its repercussions could be enormous, because the contradictory and erratic
response
of the United States to the coup could be interpreted as tacit encouragement for other would-be coup leaders elsewhere in the region, at least in Central America.
Fortunately, it is not too late, but an effective
response
must be immediate, overwhelming, and free of the ideological rivalries that have enfeebled the eurozone since the common currency was launched.
The European Central Bank is the only institution that can generate such a
response.
Prebisch’s preferred policy response, protectionism, proved disastrous for the many Latin American and African countries that heeded him.
The one that understandably gets the most attention is the capacity to mount a rapid and effective
response.
Indeed, in the United States, lessons from the Katrina experience appear to have strengthened
response
capacity, as shown by the rapid and effective intervention following Hurricane Sandy.
Even rapid
response
is more effective if key networks and systems – particularly the electricity grid – are resilient.
But through most of them, veteran emerging-markets investor Jens Nystedt notes, market participants can count on a
response
from policymakers.
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