State
in sentence
10941 examples of State in a sentence
It is undoubtedly a relief that the farrago of central and
state
sales taxes that had previously bedeviled Indian businesses will be replaced by the GST.
Each member
state
has selfishly focused on its own interests, often acting against the interests of others.
Its three pillars – private, voluntary associations, decentralization of the state, delegation political power to independent entities – can only be rebuilt patiently.
As soon as these elites gained power, they became unwilling to surrender any of the
state
authority they inherited.
This is why many schools, hospitals, cultural institutions and other establishments remain governed by centralized administrations, although they could have transformed themselves into organizations that the
state
would watch from a distance or support through transparent procedures.
Debate on decentralization of the
state
has been dragging on for nine years without any government department displaying the willingness to transfer powers to regions or to municipalities without a fight.
This is why taxation in our country remains excessive: the
state
has to pay for a thousand things which it would not have to pay if an advanced civil society existed, because citizens would pay for them directly.
If some politicians seek ideological excuses for their unwillingness to reduce
state
power, they mostly argue the following: "People have chosen us in an election; it is their will that we rule.
Social redistribution of resources is a task for the state, and the central
state'
s responsibility in this field must not be diffused.
To rely solely on the capacities of central
state
authorities or of central political bodies to always decide what needs to be done and how, equates power with truth, the most dangerous political conceit of this century.
When things are paid by the
state
budget, more money must be collected in taxes and substantial sums are consumed by such transfers.
In a system that allows tax deductions for charitable giving, beneficial initiatives get more money than they would get if the same amounts were spent by the
state.
In liberal, market driven societies, however, eugenics will not be coercively imposed by the
state
for the collective good.
It would be tempting to attribute to football a “mapping” of the emotional
state
of the world.
In the US, the federal government acts as an overall shield against common risks and provides automatic, unconditional support to states in trouble; but, in the end, it does not come to the rescue of a defaulting state, nor does it take over its government.
All federations have experienced periods of tense relations between the federal and
state
governments.
Indeed, a major problem with the current
state
of affairs is the weakness of EU institutions that are in charge of advancing the common interest and that are accountable to Europeans as a whole.
Few Palestinians expect Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to deliver what they want: a freeze on the construction and expansion of settlements, and the eventual creation of a truly sovereign Palestinian
state
on contiguous territory.
Yet the wall and the second phase of the roadmap, which calls for a Palestinian
state
with provisional borders, cannot co-exist.
This is because the second phase, which still has to be achieved, calls for a Palestinian
state
with contiguous but provisional borders.
And though I am not the British ambassador, I will be happy to
state
my belief that the UK government was wise to join the AIIB, and that the US administration, in voicing its opposition, was not.
This is critical, because the future Palestinian
state
could not offer Israel much security.
The promise of a regional settlement that offers Israel the needed security guarantee – not to mention a considerable boost to its international standing – would make the painful concessions, including compromises on borders and Jerusalem, which are critical to the creation of a Palestinian state, more digestible for Israeli leaders.
There is little historical precedent for the peaceful breakup of a state, with an exception like Czechoslovakia’s consensual split in 1993 occurring in unique circumstances.
A
state
is far more likely to go to war to defend its unity.
Putin’s return to the presidency, following a period of de facto control as prime minister, was supposed to signify a reassuring continuation of “business as usual” – a strong, orderly
state
devoid of the potentially destabilizing effects of multiparty democracy and bickering politicians.
Despite a slow start, it has compiled an admirable record in bringing to justice and providing fundamentally fair trials for some 80 indictees, including generals, heads of state, and brutal prison camp commandants.
A law ignored by most is difficult to enforce, unless the
state
employs excessive punishment in a few cases or substantial resources.
The US is the only country with large
state
of the art air, naval, and ground forces capable of global deployment - thus, the quick victory in Iraq last year.
It became obvious that Russia, for all its bravado, was in fact an economic, political, and social basket case, and the country was in such a
state
precisely because it lacked those bracing Western freedoms.
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