Stems
in sentence
356 examples of Stems in a sentence
Ultimately, however, Indonesia’s clout
stems
from its soft power.
Since the council’s legitimacy
stems
exclusively from Libyan good will and blind faith, rather than from success at the ballot box, this could be devastating.
The problem today, as Lew’s recent statement highlighted,
stems
from deeply entrenched differences between the opposing sides’ belief systems, with ideological questions about fairness and responsibility trumping pragmatic discussion of the best way forward for everyone.
Pressure for revaluation stems, therefore, not from the real needs of China economy, but from large imbalances in the United States, particularly its long-standing trade deficit, which exceeds 5% of GDP.
A second negative side effect, according to Cecchetti and Kharroubi,
stems
from the preference of bank finance for investment in real estate, where collateral is available, rather than less easily assessed investments in technology-based businesses.
But Trump’s hostility toward Europe
stems
not only from his contempt for the EU’s idea of sovereignty, but also from his obsession with reciprocity.
However, if we distinguish between the industries that produce information and communications technologies (ICT) and those that are simply users of such technologies, we can see that the productivity growth gap
stems
almost entirely from the weakness of Europe's ICT producing sector.
One source of hope
stems
from Abe’s landslide victory in the recent snap general election, which gives him the political capital to reach out to Park with a grand bargain: If Japan expresses remorse more clearly for its militaristic past, South Korea will agree to leave historical grievances out of official policy.
The widespread focus on efficiency and renewable energy
stems
from the dissemination of the Kaya Identity, which the Japanese economist Yoichi Kaya developed in 1993.
But achieving it is not – in no small part because Europe's heavy reliance on bank finance
stems
from structural and cultural factors.
Barghouti’s popularity also
stems
from his refusal from the beginning to take any office in Arafat’s corrupt PA and its institutions.
In theory, I accept the death penalty and even amputations, though in practice I believe that implementers of Sharia show little understanding for the reality that much crime
stems
from poverty and desperation.
The ninth reason for hope
stems
from the EU’s new and upcoming members.
While this admiration
stems
partly from Germany’s current economic success, the sentiment runs deeper – and extends beyond Europe.
It also
stems
from the impact of the flow of refugees on destination countries, where it has upended politics in one country after another.
China’s progress over the past three decades is a successful variation on the East Asian growth model that
stems
from the initial conditions bequeathed by a planned socialist economy.
Russia’s diplomatic protection of Syria’s brutal regime from the ire of the international community, and of Iran from the West’s drive to cripple its economy,
stems
from its conviction that ten years of costly and inconclusive wars have seriously diminished America’s global standing.
People understandably become disillusioned when their government or the business community doesn’t seem to value them, especially when such treatments
stems
from their gender, race, religion, sexual identity, or national origin.
Europe’s third neighborhood – and the most difficult to manage –
stems
from interdependence, which makes the entire world Europe’s neighbor.
Another concern
stems
from the proclamations by several participants that the conflict-resolution process should be “Syrian-led.”
A second, more immediate, threat
stems
from enacting large tax cuts and boosting public spending in an economy already nearing full employment, which implies accelerating inflation, higher interest rates, or probably some combination of the two.
Power
stems
not just from size, strategic location, a strong economy, able diplomacy, and military capacity.
That conclusion
stems
from an inescapable fact: the families of most working children depend on their labors to survive.
The most potent threat to Spain’s economic recovery
stems
from the labor market.
(Another reason
stems
from recent reports concerning the rapid melting of the polar ice cap, which seem to reconfirm worries about global warming.)
From this predicament
stems
the fashionable idea that the bond market would actually welcome less fiscal austerity, because this would boost economic growth, in turn making the level of public debt appear more sustainable in the long run.
Yet talk of “hegemony,” or even “leadership,” is taboo in Germany – a reticence that
stems
from Germans’ determination not to remind people of their country’s dark past.
The focus on good governance
stems
from the struggle to restore sustained growth during the developing-country debt crises of the 1980s.
The basis of America’s greatness and ability to lead the world
stems
from universal values that underpin a set of rules that uphold the others’ rights, not an America that tries to base its greatness on a set of deals aimed at getting the better of others.
A new public-opinion survey by the German Marshall Fund (GMF) reveals that anti-immigrant sentiment
stems
largely from misinformation, not entrenched animus.
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