Risks
in sentence
4376 examples of Risks in a sentence
Such
risks
demand far more effective and coordinated international action to prevent Syria’s internal struggle from becoming a grave regional and international crisis.
Surprisingly, one enduring problem that provokes far less popular backlash is that finance continues to dominate the world economy, generating substantial instability and mounting
risks
like those that led to the 2008 global financial crisis.
The digital revolution, despite its potential, also carries serious
risks
for privacy, security, jobs, and democracy – challenges that are compounded by the rising monopoly power of a few American and Chinese data giants, including Facebook and Google.
They may even pay lip service to the
risks
posed by climate change and inequality.
However, beyond the mortgage market, other huge
risks
are lurking, especially in the US financial system: credit cards, car loans, and presumably a few other things.
But that
risks
ensuring the persistence of the dysfunctional dynamics that brought the US to this point.
While resoluteness can be commendable, a “head-down, maul forward” policy, to use rugby parlance, brings other
risks.
It is against this background that the
risks
inherent in different kinds of reform should be assessed.
Without the incentives provided by those on the receiving end of its output, research
risks
drifting along, often without clear direction.
Dangerous financial systems pose big fiscal
risks.
So the
risks
are clear.
Moreover, it is not clear that the EIB can get further help from reinsurers in managing the
risks
it assumes by issuing such bonds because reinsurers do not yet see how they can fully hedge the
risks
involved.
We thus need a large and liquid market for longevity risk so that these different groups can creatively share their
risks
with each other.
Nor do the Arab revolutions counsel Israel’s strategic planners to take security
risks.
Delaying EMU entry
risks
weakening the incentive to complete these politically costly but necessary reforms.
We have to be able to quantify the benefits, risks, and costs of geoengineering, and compare them to the benefits, risks, and costs of our other options, so that we can make an informed decision.
The
risks
of changing course cannot be overstated.
The
risks
are greater than the promise.
Patient-capital owners are also more willing, and better able, to take
risks.
There are, no doubt, substantial
risks
of increased unemployment in the backwash of monetary unification, particularly when you factor in the already high unemployment levels in most European countries.
Is there any way to coax the IMF’s largest members, especially the United States and China, to help diffuse the
risks
posed by the world’s massive trade imbalances?
More broadly, instead of assisting people only when social
risks
materialize, public policy could support individuals throughout their working life, by adopting a more effective bespoke approach that fits peoples’ needs better than coarsely tailored schemes.
For starters, political
risks
could derail progress.
The underlying problem, though, is that both regulators and bankers continue to rely on mathematical models that promise more than they can deliver for managing financial
risks.
Although regulators now place their faith in “macro-prudential” models to manage “systemic” risk, rather than leaving financial institutions to manage their own risks, both sides lumber on in the untenable belief that all risk is measurable (and therefore controllable), ignoring Keynes’s crucial distinction between “risk” and “uncertainty.”
Consider Venezuela, where – as with Iran’s nuclear program – Russia has demonstrated its willingness to take
risks
that it would not have taken before.
The sectarian nature of Iraq’s security sector and partisan polarization in the Palestinian Authority imply similar
risks.
Along with the early euphoria and hype that typically surround the rollout of new technologies, nanotechnology has been the subject of projections concerning its possible environmental
risks
well before its wide-scale commercialization.
Indeed, many of the ingredients used to make nanomaterials are currently known to present
risks
to human health.
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.
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