Responses
in sentence
856 examples of Responses in a sentence
The consequences of this combination of uncoordinated
responses
would be widespread, scary, and bordering on chaos.
Today, looking at the cavernous gulf between rich and poor, the irresponsibility that caused the global financial crisis, and the weak and divided
responses
to climate change, I feel bitter.
For Iranians, as bearers of faith and national pride,
responses
that seem to others self-righteous and irrational are, in fact, necessary and acceptable.
The result was that they purposely designed their policy
responses
to be “timely, targeted, and temporary.”
These defining characteristics will condition the
responses
and the results in coming years.
It is now in the process of being better funded, but we are eight months into a crisis in which international capital flows became volatile and were driven largely by emergency
responses
rather than underlying economic fundamentals.
Around the world, policies and operational
responses
to violent extremism are largely informed by theory, rather than drawing on thorough empirical evidence of the personal motivations and structural factors that drive people to commit terrorist acts.
My think tank, the Copenhagen Consensus, asked 27 of the world’s top climate economists to explore all the feasible policy responses, and we concluded that the best long-term investment is in green energy research and development.
At present, it is boldly highlighting the disparate, even discordant, fiscal
responses
now being embraced by European Union governments.
All of these threats and consequences demand clear policy
responses
that look not just to the past and present, but also to the future.
Even if that information does not enable economists to predict future slowdowns with much accuracy, it does facilitate timely
responses.
During a period when great-power competition has generally trumped cooperation, two significant exceptions – the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate agreement – offer hope that formalized, multilateral
responses
to global challenges are still possible.
A second explanation addresses that question: While bold action is required, the complexity of economic conditions, and disagreement about the right policy responses, implies a risk of serious error.
The beneficiaries of these trends may have accumulated enough political influence to maintain the status quo, highlighting distributional issues that have generally received too little attention in understanding policy
responses
or their absence.
The Business Case for Europe’s RefugeesLONDON – In the face of the largest influx of refugees into Europe in decades, the
responses
and policy proposals from the European Union and its member governments have varied enormously, and the debate has become deeply politicized.
Instead, the US and its partners need a broader range of
responses
that would enable them to adopt effective measures that are proportionate to the stakes involved – measures that demonstrate a willingness to impose meaningful costs without triggering counterproductive escalation.
And if economic actors are always rational, then no bubbles – irrational market
responses
– are allowed.
But international overreaction – with
responses
that raise rather than lower the temperature, and push the region closer to a nuclear arms race – would make bad news even worse.
Such
responses
would be serious overreactions.
But the Greeks must put aside these emotional
responses
and recognize the need for many of the proposed reforms.
After the war, there were two
responses.
These developments point to a much larger phenomenon: because of delayed awareness of the complex challenges (and the related slow and partial policy responses) facing much of the West, the low-equilibrium growth pattern that has prevailed in recent years (what has been called the “new normal”) is becoming less stable.
R2P has also served as a catalyst for institutional change, with more than 50 states and intergovernmental organizations having established “focal points” – designated high-level officials whose job is to analyze atrocity risk and mobilize appropriate
responses.
The economic impact of politics in the US, while important, will be less dynamic: absent a more cooperative Congress, politics will mute policy
responses
rather than fuel greater activism.
Wider
responses
are also needed.
Humanitarian
responses
too often give lower priority – and thus far fewer resources – to education than, say, basic health, shelter, and nutrition.
Driven by structural changes, as well as lagging business and policy responses, the middle has been eroded – or is at risk – almost everywhere you look.
With wise policy responses, the impact is likely to be relatively mild and short-lived.
But the best and most likely
responses
are those that accelerate domestic consumption growth by increasing household income, effectively deploy income from state-owned assets, and strengthen China’s social-security systems in order to reduce precautionary saving.
As for the US,
responses
to Macron’s victory are probably mixed.
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