Restructuring
in sentence
849 examples of Restructuring in a sentence
And what goes on in your brain while you sleep is an intensely active period of
restructuring
that's crucial for how our memory works.
When you think about all the internal
restructuring
and forming of new connections that occurs while you slumber, you could even say that proper sleep will have you waking up every morning with a new and improved brain, ready to face the challenges ahead.
Now, the second thing that I want to talk about was this idea of restructuring, that what the Web is doing is
restructuring.
Of course, sovereign debt
restructuring
is more complicated than that, but you get the basic idea.
Because I think once we do that, we can do the more important work of
restructuring
the road.
And they taught me a lot about
restructuring
the road.
The social
restructuring
must be towards restoration and repair of the earth and the communities that have been extracted from, criminalized and targeted for generations.
That's what life is: an information process that was
restructuring
and making new order.
And furthermore, our project was less and less in the focus of the management, because they started to think about new projects,
restructuring
and so on.
Yet the IMF imposed even tougher conditions on Asia than it has on Greece, including fiscal austerity, monetary tightening, and financial
restructuring.
The resource curse means, of course, that Russian elites will prefer to postpone
restructuring
the economy and modernizing the country’s political and economic institutions.
Last year, former External Affairs Minister Natwar Singh disclosed that it was actually then-Prime Minister Narasimha Rao, a shrewd and experienced Congress veteran, who pushed India’s economic reform and
restructuring.
There was no counter-balancing move to increase demand by publicly funding infrastructure investment; domestic reforms were inadequate; and the creditors offered no substantial debt
restructuring
or debt forgiveness.
For starters, growth over the last four decades was spurred mainly by the entry of new firms, rather than the
restructuring
of old ones.
The European Central Bank’s vehement opposition to what is essential to all capitalist economies – the
restructuring
of failed or insolvent entities’ debt – is evidence of the continuing fragility of the Western banking system.
Indeed, the most curious aspect of the ECB’s position was its threat not to accept restructured government bonds as collateral if the ratings agencies decided that the
restructuring
should be classified as a credit event.
The whole point of
restructuring
was to discharge debt and make the remainder more manageable.
If the bonds were acceptable as collateral before the restructuring, surely they were safer after the restructuring, and thus equally acceptable.
In this context, the eurozone’s most heavily indebted countries will have to force their creditors to accept a
restructuring
of public debt.
But if, as seems likely, such devaluations are left too late, debt
restructuring
might still be needed.
But in the more "advanced" socialist countries, such as Russia, where 90% of the population was employed in state-owned industries,
restructuring
the state sector – a much harder job in many ways – was a necessity, and an obstacle to quick recovery.
Continual
restructuring
and consolidation will be needed to create a balanced regional geopolitical architecture, which must broaden beyond ASEAN members to meet the needs of Japan, the US, Australia, India, China, and Russia – all of which have vital interests in the region.
But what if populist movements’ continued electoral success helps to drive forward a broader political
restructuring
that ultimately strengthens European democracy?
Next year’s European Parliament election is likely to reveal more about the potential for such political
restructuring.
Although the details remain unclear, a thorough
restructuring
of the European political scene – shaped largely by attitudes toward Europe – seems certain.
If the European Parliament election next year helps to advance this restructuring, this may end up constituting a large step forward for democracy in Europe.
In Germany,
restructuring
of the SOEs of the former East Germany began soon after reunification and proceeded quickly, due to Chancellor Kohl's political will and the vast financial resources lavished on the problem.
Although such
restructuring
so far often takes the form of mergers and bankruptcy, a great many SOEs have been converted into some kind of share-holding corporations, with the majority of shares held by workers in the firms.
With the growth of private savings, the capital
restructuring
of SOEs (putting private investors in control) without outright sales of state assets (ie, public redistribution of the capital stock) becomes feasible in both economic and political terms.
This new rival economy is now permitting the same sort of
restructuring
Germany undertook in the early 1990s.
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