Results
in sentence
3090 examples of Results in a sentence
Restructuring Debt RestructuringBERKELEY – Sometimes the worst intentions yield the best
results.
Shades of GrayIt takes a very close look at the
results
of the recent elections in the German state of North-Rhine-Westphalia to find among the list of “Others” the tally for “The Greys”: they got 0.1% of the vote.
Mervyn King, a former academic who is currently Governor of the Bank of England, and his colleagues have a vivid name for the toxic cocktail that results: “doom loop.”
But its acolytes should reflect on the uniformly disastrous
results
of centralized credit provision in the past.
But each attempt, while producing some results, ended in disappointment.
With more realistic expectations, it achieved results: the New START arms control treaty, tougher sanctions on Iran, cooperation on transportation to and from Afghanistan, and Russia’s accession to the World Trade Organization.
Nor will it make corporate executives less concerned about the next quarter’s
results.
On the first day of the talks in Istanbul, Jalili accepted a US request for a bilateral meeting within the context of the negotiations, and all participants deemed the
results
so far to be a step in the right direction.
Moreover, different methods of collecting consumer prices yield different results, depending on how housing costs are treated and the hedonic adjustment applied.
A national sports policy can be conducive to good
results.
The
results
from this experiment replicated the findings from the outdoor recess results: the children were more attentive after recess than before.
The fact that these
results
were obtained using well-controlled field experiments and replication across a number of studies instills confidence in the findings.
Political leaders, Gehl and Porter continue, “compete on ideology and unrealistic promises, not on action and results,” and “divide voters and serve special interests” – all while facing little accountability.
This yearning for providential men or women in our global age
results
from at least three factors.
As the Dutch now confront the
results
of their most consequential election in decades, we can only hope that they heed the lessons of their most famous philosopher and do not allow themselves to be governed by fear and hate.
In the rich countries of the global north, the widening gap between rich and poor
results
from technological change, globalization, and the misdeeds of investment bankers.
Hamilton’s sobering
results
show that, over the long sweep of history, every recession but one was preceded by an increase in oil prices, and every oil market disruption but one was followed by a recession.
While this is obviously a move in the right direction, it will produce few
results.
Setting aside the issue of nanomaterials’ toxicity, preliminary
results
suggest that fabricating nanomaterials entails risks that are less than or comparable to those associated with many current industrial activities.
Researchers are tempted by persuasive
results
that can attract the interest of policymakers, who are tempted by a selective reading of the evidence that can provide them with ammunition in domestic and international debate.
Doing so would not only improve productivity, competitiveness, and business
results
over time.
But to achieve these results, and thereby convince our citizens of the EU’s value, Europe’s decision-making capacity must be strengthened and democratized.
According to research by New York University political scientist Alastair Smith, who has examined British general-election polling data and
results
dating back to 1945, decisions by prime ministers to hold an early election often backfire.
It is now widely accepted that it is important to reward bankers for long-term
results.
Rewarding bankers for short-term results, even when those
results
are subsequently reversed, produces incentives to take excessive risks.
But tying executive payoffs to long-term
results
does not provide a complete answer to the challenge facing firms and regulators.
The question still remains: long-term
results
for whom?
The international community has an obligation to make sure that the coming year will bring concrete
results.
But, despite these trumpeted results, the reality is much harsher.
But the
results
are of interest nonetheless.
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