Restore
in sentence
1262 examples of Restore in a sentence
It shows that, for $450 million, you could
restore
sight to nine million people with curable blindness, or provide 13 million families with the tools and techniques to grow 50% more food.
When a person chooses to buy “Salvator Mundi”rather than
restore
sight to nine million people, what does that say about their values?
By now, Saudi Arabia recognizes that low oil prices will not fully
restore
its market share in Asia and Europe.
The only way to
restore
public integrity, these groups assert, is by means of a rigidly applied code of personal conduct.
None of these reforms has been sufficient to
restore
the stronger growth that Europe desperately needs.
The politics of this approach will be difficult, particularly in the rich countries; but, structured properly, concerted structural reform could help to
restore
growth, which would feed back into healthier budgets, more jobs, better balance sheets, and less financial risk.
What this line of research explicitly does not tell us is that deleveraging will
restore
growth by itself.
Similarly, if fiscal stimulus has a muted effect because the recipients of the income are saving to
restore
damaged household balance sheets, it is not clear we want to discount the accelerated deleveraging benefit, even if it shows up in domestic demand only later.
Only such changes – including lobbying reforms – can
restore
effective governance.
The obvious lesson of 1907 that Americans learned was that central banks were the best placed institutions to
restore
liquidity in a financial panic, and, in the longer run, monetary reform gave the US its own central bank, the Federal Reserve, by 1914.
In the former republics, the politicins who favor strong ties to Russia are also those who favor a return to old Soviet ways and thus the forces behind stronger intra-CIS ties are not those of liberals interested in European Union-type arrangements, but lobbies who loath markets and pluralism and wish to
restore
planning, conformity, indeed all the old Soviet ways.
Ultimately, the indicators are that the new Obama administration will seek to
restore
an international status quo that preceded the Bush presidency.
So the challenge for America is not only to
restore
productivity, but also to
restore
its links to the main currents of world trade.
Each country would need to
restore
confidence in its banks’ solvency, which would most likely require a blanket bank guarantee and a recapitalization scheme (such as TARP).
The idea is not to prevent necessary adjustments – for example, in the form of budget-deficit reduction – but to spread them out over time, to
restore
confidence, and to serve as an external seal of approval on a government’s credibility.
This may be necessary to
restore
robust growth, but it is not sufficient.
When the bubble bursts, the afflicted country can
restore
competitiveness only through a painful process of real depreciation.
As long as each remains convinced that no alternative to cooperation exists within the EU, and that European cooperation remains a priority for both, it should not be overly difficult to
restore
their leadership.
If they are to recover their reputations, and
restore
the health of their societies and economies, they must act decisively to weaken the allure of terrorist recruiters.
All of these countries are also determined to
restore
their output to previous peak levels and should be able to pump more oil than they did in the 1970s and 1980s by exploiting new production technologies pioneered in the US.
In order to
restore
growth in developed economies, while sustaining strong GDP growth and reducing poverty in the developing world, a more unified approach to economic policymaking that draws from both traditions is needed.
Initial restructuring terms often are too timid, relative to the haircut needed to
restore
solvency.
Meanwhile, Europe struggles to find a solution to its deficit and debt problems by treating them with short-term liquidity fixes whose purpose is to buy time for fiscal consolidation and, in the absence of the exchange-rate mechanism, some kind of deflationary process to
restore
external competitiveness.
In such conditions, France urgently needs to
restore
and maintain economic growth, and should seek to coordinate its policies with those of other eurozone member countries.
Raising the retirement age to 67, abolishing wage indexation, and compelling countries to enshrine a debt brake in their national constitutions are reasonable measures to enhance competitiveness and
restore
confidence in the euro.
One thing is certain: it will require a lot more than a warmed-over Lisbon Agenda, with easy targets and toothless enforcement, to
restore
confidence in the euro and safeguard the monetary union.
For example, China is working to
restore
the last stretch of the old Silk Road to reach the ports of the Mediterranean.
These programs are needed to limit contagion and
restore
stability to the eurozone, pending deeper institutional reforms that address fiscal interdependency in the context of monetary union.
Without an effective rebalancing program, growth will be sub-par, and employment difficult to
restore
on a sustainable basis.
Government stimulus programs are limited in their ability to
restore
demand.
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