Response
in sentence
4470 examples of Response in a sentence
The EU has a long history of adapting in
response
to political pressures in important member states.
In response, central banks may intervene in currency markets to prevent appreciation, at the cost of accumulating low-yield foreign reserves and diverting themselves from their primary goal of price stability.
The escalating US-China trade war is a
response
to three concerns that American leaders have long articulated: job losses, competition over technology, and a perceived Chinese threat to US national security.
Firms, especially in sectors sheltered from international competition, have retained market power and have increased prices in
response
to the rising cost of capital.
Deflation fears were mistakenly raised in 2001-2003, when the strong
response
of the US housing market and consumer spending to lower interest rates should have made the debate redundant.
Ironically, that policy
response
helped to fuel the credit and housing bubble, whose collapse has triggered the current recession, which may actually bring about deflation.
After all, one of the lessons of the 1962 war was that a vacillating
response
to Chinese aggression is self-defeating, particularly in situations like that posed by the incursion at Daulat Beg Oldie.
Faced with a new EU initiative, our traditional
response
has often been to oppose it, vote against it, lose the vote, then sulkily to adopt it while blaming everyone else.
Yet, the motto of the half-century since, at least insofar as the world's
response
to genocide is concerned, might better be stated as "Again and again."
Indeed, whenever genocide begins, the world's usual
response
- especially that of Western leaders - is to turn away.
There is ample precedent for a Congressional
response.
It is far from clear, in other words, that the right
response
to the latest crisis is an abrupt about-face.
Without a strong and internationally coordinated
response
to the sinking of the Cheonan, such reckless provocations are not only likely to continue, but may become more frequent.
A UN Security Council resolution denouncing North Korea’s brutal attack on the Cheonan must be an essential part of any international diplomatic
response.
In response, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un seized all South Korean assets in the region, giving the 248 managers living there only a few hours to pack their personal belongings and leave.
In response, “[p]olicymakers explicitly reject the conservative paradigm and ignore the existence of any type of constraints on macroeconomic policy,” such that, “[i]dle capacity is seen as providing the leeway for expansion.”
The situation screams “emergency” – and has triggered a
response
by the EU.
It would be easy to interpret this shift as a
response
to the human and economic cost of America’s interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Meanwhile, a State Department spokesperson urged India’s authorities to act with “appropriate democratic restraint” in
response
to the crisis provoked by Harare’s protests.
Kim and I worked closely together from 2000 to 2005, to scale up the world’s
response
to the AIDS epidemic.
People buy CDS contracts not because they expect a default, but because they expect the CDS to appreciate in
response
to adverse developments.
And now, in
response
to the crisis, borders are being reinstated in the Schengen Area, which not too long ago symbolized European unity and freedom of movement for its citizens.
But we can expect that the market for long-term GDP-linked bonds from countries like Argentina, where the future of the economy is uncertain, would be volatile, as investors adjust their expectations of future GDP growth up and down in
response
to new information.
Finland was the first to issue national inflation-indexed bonds, in 1946, in
response
to massive wartime price growth.
This is true not only of abstinence campaigns, for which there is no evidence of effectiveness, but also for many other mainstays of the AIDS
response.
This is clearly a longer-term
response
to the epidemic: research by Dean Jamison and Robert Hecht for RethinkHIV suggests that we are about 20 years away from large-scale vaccination, and that increasing current funding by around 10%, or $100 million a year, would meaningfully shorten that projection.
As a shorter-term
response
to the epidemic, the Nobel laureates were convinced by research by the economist Lori Bollinger that we could practically wipe out mother-to-child transmission of HIV by 2015 with additional expenditures of just $140 million a year.
Trump’s Tomahawks Won’t HelpNEW YORK – There is a tragic inconsistency in US President Donald Trump’s
response
to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s use of sarin gas against his country’s people.
Nominal-GDP targets may be a necessary way forward, but they are not a sufficient
response
to slow global growth.
Only a coordinated policy
response
covering all of the G-20 economies can break this vicious cycle of low confidence and slow trade growth.
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