Stresses
in sentence
138 examples of Stresses in a sentence
And in such a uniquely controlled – and controllable – society, the normal social
stresses
that arise from economic disruptions are eminently manageable.
China’s economic exceptionalism is now being threatened by a perfect storm of existing
stresses
– namely, the domestic debt build-up – and new complications, including US trade barriers, the geopolitical pushback against China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), and tightening monetary conditions, particularly in the United States.
Since that is not enough to stop other Chinese theft of US civilian and military technology, the new NSS rightly
stresses
that the US government will take further steps to stop it.
Another clause
stresses
accountability to one’s peers, a hallmark of professional self-regulation.
NATO has explicitly acknowledged the UN’s unique role in global security and
stresses
its aim to collaborate with, not displace, it.
Everyone
stresses
the rule of law, but it matters a great deal what kind of rule of law is established.
The Bank rightly
stresses
that aid cannot work in an otherwise inappropriate economic environment.
Meanwhile, China’s slowdown has contributed to the end of the commodity super-cycle, which, together with the sharp rise in long-term interest rates (owing to the scare of an early Fed exit from QE), has led to economic and financial
stresses
in many emerging-market economies.
By reducing the
stresses
of driving in heavy traffic and unfamiliar locations, this technology promises greater protection for both drivers and pedestrians.
The second stage could be called the period of storms and
stresses.
Buddhism
stresses
compassion and mercy as much as Christianity does.
Not surprisingly, Bush’s new rhetoric
stresses
that he has a “strategy for victory.”
But so are standards for social and emotional learning, which
stresses
the importance of recognizing our emotions, learning how to deal with them, and fostering empathy for others.
Instead, the US
stresses
to foreign governments that an effective global trading system requires not only the removal of formal trade barriers, but also the absence of policies aimed at causing currency values that promote large trade surpluses.
By contrast, the multilateral approach appeals to most economists, because it
stresses
the balance-of-payments distortions that arise from mismatches between saving and investment.
The aspect it
stresses
is military power.
These
stresses
have been exacerbated by the ongoing trade war between the US and China.
All of these factors place deep
stresses
on the social fabric which, so the skeptics argue, will ultimately play out in the political arena.
The Bush administration
stresses
democracy and human rights, which is a good agenda as far as it goes.
However, it
stresses
that the use of military force has to remain the ultimate resort which does not necessarily mean the last.
But, despite many
stresses
and strains over the years – including 22 months of autocratic rule during a “state of emergency” declared by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1975 – it has survived, and even flourished.
But, in the long term, the greatest boon of all, for both food security and the environment, will likely be the ability of new crop varieties to tolerate periods of drought and other water-related
stresses.
Along with more mouths to feed,
stresses
on food supplies will include conflicts, economic volatility, extreme weather events, and climate change.
Phelps
stresses
that corporatist thinking has had a long and enduring history, going back to Saint Paul, the author of as many as 14 books of the New Testament.
But democratic governments fear that these processes are too cumbersome, and would undercut the flexibility of the “multi-stakeholder” approach, which
stresses
the involvement of the private and non-profit sectors, as well as governments.
Yet the election was revealing, not only of problems within British politics, but also of similar
stresses
in political systems across the West.
As Indonesia’s size makes it a natural leader of ASEAN, the ACD lends Thaksin a broader platform that
stresses
Thailand’s geographical advantages.
As he stresses, the most fundamental driver of financial instability is the ability of fractional reserve banks (and shadow banking systems) to create credit and money, and thus to inject additional spending power into the economy.
Consequently, forecasts for the United Kingdom – where financial-sector
stresses
largely resembled those in the US – have been significantly less accurate.
The reason that India, despite predictions of its imminent disintegration, has survived the
stresses
that have beset it during more than six decades of independence, is that it has maintained a consensus on how to manage without consensus.
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