Restrictions
in sentence
1028 examples of Restrictions in a sentence
These
restrictions
are yet another device designed to give Chinese companies space to develop their technological capabilities.
Finally, China continues to exercise tight control over its financial system, as well as maintaining
restrictions
on capital inflows and outflows.
To fight accelerating price growth, the authorities adopted measures at the end of 2010 to cool overheating domestic demand, first through credit
restrictions
and higher reserve requirements for banks – so-called “macroprudential” measures – and later through the resumption of interest-rate hikes.
Indeed, more recently, the credit
restrictions
that were implemented at the end of 2010 have been loosened in order to stimulate consumer demand.
Given the US Supreme Court’s evisceration of campaign-finance restrictions, it has become easier than ever for concentrated economic power to exercise concentrated political power.
In December 2015, a study commissioned by the British government and chaired by the economist Jim O’Neill found that the most effective means of changing behaviors would be to cap the use of antibiotics, but allow individual countries to experiment with taxes or
restrictions
to meet the cap.
Ultimately, formularies (payer
restrictions
on which drugs they will cover, and how much), rather than advertisers, will control how the choices are displayed.
Political
restrictions
on Anwar, however, end next month, and an MP from his Justice Party – probably his wife – is expected to step aside to allow him to run in a by-election.
To stabilize exchange-rate expectations, it imposed tighter
restrictions
on short-term capital outflows.
Enduring
restrictions
on short-term capital outflows, however, could still become a target, though such criticism, too, would be unwarranted.
To be sure, when China’s economic situation has called for it, the authorities have taken steps to reduce
restrictions
on capital flows.
Several new members have adopted reciprocal
restrictions.
Innovation is more likely where it is possible to defy
restrictions
and authority; where individuals and groups are allowed to ignore conventions; where a mixing of ideas, people, and cultures is permitted and stimulated; and where management techniques enable firms and industries to acknowledge, identify, and learn from errors as quickly as possible.
For China, this would mean abolishing all
restrictions
on foreign ownership, including the requirement that technology be shared, rather than licensed.
Much research is needed to understand which interventions or
restrictions
on individual choice are needed to make certain kinds of market equilibria stable.
France has undergone a set of critically important reforms over the past two decades: economic and financial liberalization, elimination of price and foreign exchange controls, the end of credit restrictions, European liberalization, reduced inflation and trade deficits, the advent of the euro and the forced globalization of the country's firms.
Such
restrictions
on freedom did not meet with much public opposition when they were adopted.
Some of today’s
restrictions
on habeas corpus and civil liberties have sunset clauses restricting their validity; all such rules should be re-examined by parliaments regularly.
That is why the recent spike in food prices has led many food-growing countries to impose export
restrictions
and has caused near panic among those concerned about global poverty.
According to World Bank estimates, complete elimination of all merchandise trade
restrictions
would ultimately boost developing-country incomes by no more than 1%.
Alcohol
restrictions
were tightened.
The negative effects of falling population growth can be mitigated by easing
restrictions
on international migration, and by encouraging more women and retirees to enter or stay in the workforce.
At the very least, European policymakers will need to be willing to (a) “pesify” contracts, (b) impose heavy
restrictions
on commercial banking operations, (c) restructure debts, and (d) introduce capital and exchange controls.
But, in the short run, given the huge uncertainties involved in a regime switch, and the loss of access to capital markets that follows a debt renegotiation, foreign exchange becomes scarce, requiring a plethora of traditional
restrictions
– some more distorting than others – on capital movements.
Argentina’s exit from its dollar peg was a traumatic experience, concentrating contract violations, wealth redistribution, defaults, bank runs, exchange restrictions, and severe limitations on capital movements into a short period of time.
Under Saddam Hussein,
restrictions
were imposed on the Shiite seminary in Najaf – traditionally a counterbalance to Iran’s Shiite establishment – forcing the emigration of a number of clerics to the Iranian seminary in Qom.
If the US loosens
restrictions
on exports to China and maintains its 18.3% share of China’s total imports, American exports of high-tech products to China stand to reach more than $60 billion over this period.
Against this backdrop, it should be obvious that isolationist measures – not least trade and immigration
restrictions
– will be economically disadvantageous in the long run.
Beyond raising the costs of economic transactions among Muslims at the time, rules meant to limit religious freedom – the denial of “choice of law” to Muslims and
restrictions
on non-Muslim judicial testimony – helped to create a culture of mistrust that now limits progress in various areas.
In fact, the requirement was very timid, posing so many
restrictions
in terms of quantity and length of ownership as to leave the bar to institutional investors effectively in place.
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