Solution
in sentence
3195 examples of Solution in a sentence
Instead of developing a nuanced
solution
to a multifaceted problem – an approach that would involve careful thought, not to mention mistakes and adjustments – every issue, from official corruption to business management, was viewed as one-dimensional.
A better
solution
would be to develop the credit-rating market, establish a more comprehensive regulatory framework for the financial system, and create an effective mechanism for ring-fencing risk.
Democratic institutions are designed for making deals between competing interests, with parliaments specializing in finding the right combination of concessions to enable agreement on a generally accepted
solution.
At a time when political processes are stalled on both sides of the Atlantic, the US Federal Reserve and the ECB have been engaging in a series of policy innovations, feeling their way toward a
solution
that could promote and sustain economic recovery.
Taxing fossil fuels to reduce carbon emissions is a sensible part of the
solution
to climate change, but it is not the only or best way to prevent warming.
The best
solution
to climate change achieves the most good for the lowest cost.
The most pertinent question of all is: Why don’t we choose a
solution
to global warming that will actually work?
The US also began to borrow freely from China’s vast reservoir of surplus saving – a convenient
solution
for the world’s largest deficit saver.
The
solution
to America’s health-care woes lies somewhere between socialized medicine and laissez-faire.
Though some Republicans pretend otherwise, there is simply no
solution
that decreases the role of government without increasing the ranks of the uninsured – and thus raising total health-care costs.
This is why the supposedly painless solution, debt-for-equity swaps, will not be painless.
By identifying the problems and envisioning the preferred solution, one can define the set of constraints into which technological innovation fits, and establish a clear, albeit often difficult, path to its realization.
Indeed, a common approach – defining key market needs, coupling them with
solution
constraints, and pushing the boundaries of current thinking – applies to all kinds of innovation.
That traditional
solution
would only perpetuate the problems of the Balkans.
Ultimately, that became more of a problem than a
solution.
One
solution
could be to provide national representatives a venue to convene for European-wide debates.
Within this new peace paradigm, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would become amenable to a truly international
solution.
As if the Israeli-Palestinian conflict’s depth and duration were not enough to merit an international solution, there is also the issue of Palestine’s mistrust of the US.
Under a truly international paradigm, the principles underlying a peace deal – two states along the 1967 border (with territorial swaps to accommodate Israel’s settlement blocs), two capitals in Jerusalem, an agreed
solution
to the refugee problem, and robust security arrangements – could be enshrined in a Security Council resolution.
Research conducted in my laboratory on adults reporting histories of childhood sexual abuse provides a
solution
to this bitter controversy.
Since China’s multilateral surplus is the economic issue and many countries are concerned about it, the US should seek a multilateral, rules-based
solution.
On April 2, 2009, world leaders will head to London again to find a
solution
to a financial and economic crisis as dire as that of 1929.
Such a merging of Hamas with the established Palestinian political organizations would signify Hamas’s formal acceptance of a two-state solution, and would mark an important step in transforming the movement.
Leaders such as Mashal, who has expressed a readiness to forsake alliances with Syria and Iran and to accept a two-state
solution
with Israel, should be bolstered rather than boycotted.
Any genuine
solution
must include a fund to help communities whose health facilities, schools, and other public services are under stress because of above-average population growth.
Some believe in a global free-for-all; others believe that Britain should be free of foreign entanglements; and a third cohort wants, like Labour, to be part of the EU, viewing it not as the problem, but as part of the
solution
to managing globalization.
Why Tax Cuts for the Rich Solve NothingNEW YORK – Although America’s right-wing plutocrats may disagree about how to rank the country’s major problems – for example, inequality, slow growth, low productivity, opioid addiction, poor schools, and deteriorating infrastructure – the
solution
is always the same: lower taxes and deregulation, to “incentivize” investors and “free up” the economy.
List of priorities, outcome document from Copenhagen Consensus by UN ambassadors, June 16-17 2006 at Georgetown University:challengeopportunity1Communicable DiseasesScaled-up basic health services2Sanitation and WaterCommunity-managed water supply and sanitation3EducationPhysical expansion4Malnutrition and HungerImproving infant and child nutrition5Malnutrition and HungerInvestment in technology in developing country agriculture6Communicable DiseasesControl of HIV/AIDS7Communicable DiseasesControl of malaria8Malnutrition and HungerReducing micro nutrient deficiencies9Subsidies and Trade BarriersOptimistic Doha: 50% liberalization10EducationImprove quality / Systemic reforms11Sanitation and WaterSmall-scale water technology for livelihoods12EducationExpand demand for schooling13Malnutrition and HungerReducing Low Birth Weight for high risk pregnancies14EducationReductions in the cost of schooling to increase demand15Sanitation and WaterResearch to increase water productivity in food production16MigrationMigration for development17CorruptionProcurement reform18ConflictsAid post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict19Sanitation and WaterRe-using waste water for agriculture20MigrationGuest worker policies21Sanitation and WaterSustainable food and fish production in wetlands22CorruptionGrassroots monitoring and service delivery23CorruptionTechnical assistance to develop monitoring and transparency initiatives24MigrationActive immigration policies25Subsidies and Trade BarriersPessimistic Doha: 25% liberalization26CorruptionReduction in the state-imposed costs of business/government relations27Climate ChangeThe Kyoto Protocol28ConflictsAid as conflict prevention29CorruptionReform of revenue collection30Financial InstabilityInternational
solution
to the currency-mismatch problem31ConflictsTransparency in natural resource rents as conflict prevention32ConflictsMilitary spending post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict33Financial InstabilityRe-regulate domestic financial markets34ConflictsShortening conflicts: Natural resource tracking35Financial InstabilityReimpose capital controls36Financial InstabilityAdopt a common currency37Subsidies and Trade BarriersFull reform: 100% liberalization38Climate ChangeOptimal carbon tax39Climate ChangeValue-at-risk carbon tax40Climate ChangeA carbon tax starting at $2 and ending at $20The Eurozone According to MerkelBRUSSELS – We had almost given up waiting for them, but then they came in a quasi-clandestine form.
Indeed, he did, after all, announce last year that contrary to his Likud Party’s previous position, he was now willing to accept a two-state
solution
– a position that is still anathema to many Likud members, as well to at least three of the smaller parties in his government coalition.
An obvious
solution
is to build more schools in places where girls and boys must be educated separately.
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