Risks
in sentence
4376 examples of Risks in a sentence
Indeed, for the future, it is imperative to think about many new ways, involving both government and the market, to ensure that we manage better the greatest personal
risks
now faced by workers around the world.
Managers take more
risks
in search of higher returns to justify their pay, which at some point will lead to risk mispricing, and a crisis.
The Bank of England has described the way in which remuneration policy can create
risks
for banks and said that, as a result, “it is of increasing interest and concern to supervisors and regulators.”
This shift, while popular in South Korea, carries serious
risks
for the peninsula.
At the same time, though automation
risks
disrupting many jobs (or tasks within jobs) for both men and women, it also takes some of the drudgery out of current work, tailoring it to human abilities.
Why, for example, did China’s decision to accumulate foreign reserves result in a mortgage lender in Ohio taking excessive
risks?
Much has been done to improve security at nuclear facilities in recent years, but governments must do more to protect their citizens from the
risks
of catastrophic nuclear terrorism.
The same can be said of nuclear security
risks.
More fundamentally, governments in oil-producing countries are confronting a political dilemma: Stronger economic growth, though desirable, requires regimes to take
risks
that could endanger their very survival.
There are, of course, serious downside
risks
to this forecast, especially if the fiscal deficit remains high or adverse tax policies depress the rise in productivity.
The dam’s Chinese investors, for their part, relied too heavily on the depth of the two countries’ bilateral ties, and so heavily discounted the project’s political
risks.
The
risks
of carbon are high, but the opportunities to de-carbonize are even greater.
Over the longer term, it means awareness of structural
risks
like high sovereign debt, demographic shifts, and natural-resource scarcity.
But the
risks
from infectious diseases that we face today could intensify substantially, owing to the rise of anti-microbial resistance (AMR).
But, as the European economy
risks
falling into recession, many observers are asking whether “austerity” could be self-defeating.
Leaders talk about “systemic risks” and the necessity of bailouts, but at the same time let those responsible for two consecutive systemic failures maintain the same global casino that twice brought the world near collapse.
Post-modern crises entail post-modern risks, resulting in disintegration and implosion of power vacuums, not the danger of classical wars.
Without such structures, the world
risks
a competitive and disorderly race to the bottom among states – as often occurs with taxation – together with a protectionist backlash.
But, beyond the impact that this approach is having on individual economies are broader systemic
risks
that arise from surging equities and weaker currencies.
The second reason progress has lost credibility is that the digital revolution
risks
undermining the middle class that formed the backbone of the post-war societies of the world’s advanced economies.
The
risks
of waging a two-front war are obvious.
All but the most courageous remain silent; with the threat of ruin for their paper or station, the
risks
that reporters run are no longer primarily their own.
Against them, an active effort to tackle the
risks
around us is the only answer.
Meanwhile, in the absence of a crisis that demands political attention, all of the problems and
risks
that Germany’s previous coalition governments have failed to address will continue to be ignored.
Failure to address the issues and leaders involved
risks
the creation of an arc of even greater instability running from Jerusalem through Beirut, Damascus, Baghdad and Tehran.
Likewise, companies today are faced with so much uncertainty and so many
risks
that ever-lower costs of capital have not enticed them to invest more.
Yet the policies pursued in recent years have given no room for the intangibles – unstable political environments, geopolitical tremors, or rising
risks
on financial markets – that can send models off course.
Clearly, such monetary policies create soaring costs and
risks
for the economy.
It would give central banks more room to incorporate the
risks
and costs of monetary policies.
And there are other
risks
stemming from humanity’s greater collective impact on the planet, and from the growing empowerment of individuals.
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