Restore
in sentence
1262 examples of Restore in a sentence
Major investments are required to
restore
and rebuild the transportation network of the region.
One way to
restore
trust may be disclosure – for economists to declare a monetary interest in a particular analysis and, more generally, to explain who pays us.
Second, we must
restore
coral reefs' capacity to cope with environmental change--their resilience--by protecting the fish stocks that keep seaweed in check, and thereby facilitate the recovery of coral populations from bleaching.
The goal of Russia’s intervention is therefore not to contribute to the “struggle against terrorism,” as the Kremlin’s propagandists claim, but to
restore
political control, at any cost, to the regime that spawned the terrorism in the first place.
The meaning was clear to all: Weimar Russia, like Weimar Germany, signified a weak republic attacked from within by nationalists yearning to
restore
authoritarian ways.
So, should Europe embrace fiscal federalism in order to strengthen the eurozone and
restore
investor confidence?
No country – including Greece – should expect to be offered debt relief on a silver platter; relief must be earned and justified by real reforms that
restore
growth, to the benefit of both debtor and creditor.
On the policy side, the US, Europe, and Japan, too, have been postponing the serious economic, fiscal, and financial reforms that are needed to
restore
sustainable and balanced growth.
Germany increasingly recognizes that if the adjustment needed to
restore
growth, competitiveness, and debt sustainability in the eurozone’s periphery comes through austerity and internal devaluation rather than debt restructuring and exit (leading to the reintroduction of sharply depreciated national currencies), the cost will most likely be trillions of euros.
If Italy and Spain are illiquid but solvent, and large-scale financing provides enough time for austerity and economic reforms to
restore
debt sustainability, competitiveness, and growth, the current strategy will work and the eurozone will survive.
But, however important the fiscal and banking union elements of this process may be, the key is whether large-scale financing and gradual adjustments can
restore
sustainable growth in time.
Just consider what must be overcome: economic divergence and deepening recessions; irreversible balkanization of the banking system and financial markets; unsustainable debt burdens for public and private agents; daunting growth and balance-sheet costs in countries that pursue internal devaluation and deflation to
restore
competitiveness; asymmetrical adjustment, with moral-hazard risks in the core and insufficient financing in the periphery fueling incompatible political dynamics; fickle and impatient markets and investors; austerity fatigue in the periphery and bailout fatigue in the core; the absence of conditions for an optimal currency area; and serious difficulties in achieving full fiscal, banking, economic, and political union.
Germany and the ECB are relying on large-scale liquidity to buy time to allow the adjustments necessary to
restore
growth and debt sustainability.
Faced with faltering economic growth, the People’s Bank of China has stepped up efforts to
restore
stability to the renminbi, using its vast foreign reserves to prop up its exchange rate and stem the flow of funds fleeing the country.
With private ownership established, market mechanisms could
restore
efficiency.
I am puzzled, and frankly appalled, by the Fed’s failure to explain how it will
restore
its balance sheet to a non-inflationary level.
Just as only Begin could make peace with Egypt, de Klerk turn South Africa into a multi-racial society, and KGB apparatchik named Andropov to lay the foundations of perestroika and glasnost, so it may take socialists to reduce the welfare state to manageable size and former communists to
restore
sound financial management to capitalist countries nearly ruined by rightwing regimes -- whether by corruption, as in Italy, or by ideological fantasy, as in America and Britain.
In an economy where several sectors are still shackled by pervasive regulations and controls, the payment of bribes in exchange for government permits can sometimes
restore
some semblance of a free market.
On the contrary, retrofitting the global economy for climate change would help to
restore
aggregate demand and growth.
Many economies need to fix the financial sector and
restore
credit, while many more need to raise productivity in order to boost growth and create jobs.
That means coming together to provide the resources needed to
restore
competitiveness, revive growth, and prepare to face the challenges of tomorrow.
To meet them, it must first
restore
its international credibility.
Nevertheless, more will be needed to
restore
financial stability, such as enlarging the total firepower of the European Financial Stability Facility.
The best way to use the advanced countries’ remaining fiscal capacity is to
restore
public investment in the context of a credible multi-year stabilization plan.
At a November 2008 G20 summit in Washington, the world’s largest economies committed to doing whatever it would take to
restore
growth and stimulate domestic demand through macroeconomic stimulus.
A show of overwhelming force might
restore
calm to the markets.
The EU’s special representative in the South Caucasus, Swedish diplomat Peter Semneby, played a crucial role in bringing back Imedi TV in time to
restore
media balance ahead of the presidential election – possibly the first time that the EU took a leading role in seminal political events in Georgia.
The longer it takes to
restore
confidence in key public and, to a lesser extent, private institutions, the greater the impediments to our wellbeing and that of our children.
To
restore
investment and credit to levels consistent with economic escape velocity, a recovering Greece will require two new public institutions that work side by side with the private sector and with European institutions: A development bank that harnesses public assets and a “bad bank” that enables the banking system to get out from under their non-performing assets and
restore
the flow of credit to profitable, export-oriented firms.
Today, debt is making it difficult for developed countries to resume pre-2008 growth rates, let alone
restore
the levels of GDP that would have been attained if the subsequent Great Recession had not happened.
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