Response
in sentence
4470 examples of Response in a sentence
Finally, geopolitical risks in the Middle East are rising, owing to the possibility of an Israeli military
response
to Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
Rightly so: without a strong policy
response
aimed at building a more inclusive growth model, rising populism and economic nationalism will impair the functioning of markets and overall macroeconomic stability – potentially cutting short the current global recovery.
China's
response
to the SARS epidemic suggests an almost automatic defensiveness when the outside world seems to impinge on it or threaten it in some potentially harmful or embarrassing way.
Such secretiveness--rooted in fear of humiliation--has been the Chinese Communist Party's traditional
response
to bad news.
Alternatively, European exports could fall in
response
to geopolitical events in Asia or the Middle East, depressing overall economic activity in Europe.
The conventional
response
– reducing interest rates – is impossible, because current short-term interest rates in the eurozone countries are already near zero or negative.
An appropriate
response
to this dilemma may be a policy of coordinated fiscal expansion.
Waiting until the downturn occurs to plan this coordinated
response
would be a mistake.
But I have feared for many years that large-scale immigration to the UK would produce a harmful populist
response.
Addressing these challenges requires a coordinated European response, and I greatly regret that Britain will now play a much-reduced role in shaping common European endeavors.
This is a classic bureaucratic response: faced with a problem, create a new institution.
By contrast, in a deep, long-lasting recession, with the central bank’s policy rate at the zero lower bound (ZLB), a well-timed, sensible fiscal
response
can, in principle, be helpful.
In response, the government removed the redistricting issue from parliament to the constitutional court – an attempt, reformers argued, to hold back change.
In
response
to the crisis of 2007-2009, governments in most industrialized countries put in place some of the most generous bailouts ever seen for large financial institutions.
In this age of “planetary challenges and interconnection between countries,” he wrote in
response
to May’s statement, “the need has never been greater for a sense of a shared human fate.”
America didn’t budge on bilateral negotiations, and its
response
to North Korea’s recent announcement that it possesses nuclear weapons likewise emphasized the need to revive the six-party talks.
Consider Greece, where the Fund’s
response
was clearly insufficient.
The IMF and the IEO both ignore the same central problems in the official
response
to the euro crisis so far.
Following its inadequate
response
to the euro crisis, the Fund should admit that the time has come to return to its roots.
But we had better know for sure which way the
response
will go before we apply the remedy.
But the region’s financial sector remains under stress, and a protracted adjustment process still lies ahead in
response
to rising levels of non-performing loans and banks’ recapitalization needs.
The
response
to corruption needs to be as complex and variegated as corruption itself.
But seldom will it be the case that the best
response
is simply to walk away.
Central banks that also regulate the banking industry were asked tough questions about their insouciance in the face of rapid credit expansion, but they were widely praised for their prompt and decisive
response
when trouble hit.
In
response
to these heretical outbursts, Carney has sounded emollient and understanding; and Draghi has laudably engaged with his critics’ arguments.
Savers are bitterly complaining that they are being penalized for their prudence; refusing to debate this and other implications of current monetary policies is not an acceptable
response.
This implies that no EU-wide
response
can be expected, and thus that Schengen is probably doomed.
Could a more moderate approach by the Obama administration beget a more conciliatory
response
from Khamenei?
At first glance, Russia’s
response
is somewhat surprising.
The Russian foreign ministry’s statement in
response
to the Western reports says it all.
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