Succeed
in sentence
1600 examples of Succeed in a sentence
Ironically, the encouragement of housing debt in the US doesn’t even
succeed
in raising homeownership rates relative to other countries: even at the peak of the housing boom, the subsidies drove up the price of housing more than the quantity.
All political factions must remain committed to the eradication drive if it is to
succeed.
Can such initiatives
succeed?
Is there any reason to believe that an additional five brigades will
succeed
in stabilizing Baghdad now when similar efforts have failed in the past?
Spaniards in general, and particularly their political leaders, must rediscover what it takes to
succeed.
Despite the recent stock market jitters, the constellation of institutional and political factors for this giant experiment to
succeed
has never been so favorable, as exemplified by the spread of democracy and the rule of law in this decade.
Who will
succeed
him?
Often, only these parties have sufficient political support on the left to
succeed
in introducing needed reforms in labor and other markets.
Most important, Merkel and Macron both need the Mercron partnership to work if they are to
succeed
in building a stronger Europe.
And although Carter did not
succeed
in balancing the federal budget, he didn’t blow it up, either.
An alternative, Hawkins-like approach to economic development would take massive amounts of data about the world and ask what is likely to
succeed
next in a country or a city at a given point in time, given what is already present and in light of the experience there and everywhere else.
In any case, for Musk’s plan to succeed, experimenting on humans as well as animals will be unavoidable.
If negotiations between the “troika” (the European Commission, the ECB, and the International Monetary Fund) and the new Greek government succeed, the result will be a face-saving compromise for both sides; if no agreement is reached, Greece will default.
But he is unlikely to
succeed.
A substantive and successful dialogue with the government would not require the protesters to call off their campaign for democracy; it would simply end the current phase of a campaign that eventually will
succeed.
The issue is simple: can France and Germany win sufficient support for a large stride towards a politically more integrated EU; or will Britain, which opposes such moves,
succeed
in blocking them?
As for the structural reforms now underway or in the planning stage, the most important question is not whether the euro, the crisis, or a combination of the two brought them about, but whether they will
succeed.
If the world is to
succeed
in quickly reducing global emissions to prevent climate change from reaching catastrophic levels, reducing HFCs is a sensible – perhaps the most sensible – first step.
But these two prominent, national membership organizations may
succeed
in dampening Islamic militancy where the government, afraid of waging the battle it must fight, has failed dismally.
We did so with the same commitment and faith in their ability to
succeed
that the US devoted to re-building Western Europe after WWII.
To succeed, these efforts must be matched with equal determination by the countries of the region in delivering on reform.
The reality is that the rest of Europe cannot
succeed
in restoring growth without Germany, and Germany remains wedded to the austerity cure.
Fortunately for China, other countries want – or should want – it to
succeed.
We must, therefore, do whatever we can to help Trump – if not to succeed, then at least to avoid crashing and burning.
His victory shows that it is possible to
succeed
in politics through decency, honesty, and high intelligence.
To understand why, and what it will take to succeed, consider how Chinese governance has worked in recent decades.
To succeed, however, they may have to revise their approach to managing local governments and introduce greater downward accountability in assessing their performance.
True, such talks will be difficult, and they may not
succeed.
Even if the Greek government were to
succeed
shortly in stabilizing its debt ratio (soon to reach 150% of GDP), it would be at too high a level to convince creditors to continue lending.
A similar choice now faces US President Barack Obama as he considers who should
succeed
Ben Bernanke as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
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