Suggested
in sentence
1129 examples of Suggested in a sentence
Indeed, our monetary analysis
suggested
that the risk of protracted deflation was negligible.
It was
suggested
that these outcomes required a force equivalent to a multi-story fall or major motor-vehicle accident, causing immediate symptoms or collapse.
So I
suggested
that the company try to work with the Chinese messaging service WeChat to develop an AMR-awareness app.
Africa’s Latest False ChoiceDJIBOUTI – With the rise of Asian economies and their desire to play a greater role on the world stage, it has been
suggested
that Africa should choose between keeping its partnerships with the West and embracing new alliances with the East.
As Thomas Philippon and Ariell Reshef have suggested, this group’s sharp increase in earning power appears more related to deregulation of finance (and perhaps other sectors).
(Citigroup’s chief economist, Willem Buiter, has
suggested
numerous ways to address the constraint of paper currency, but eliminating it is the easiest.)
Mind you, two years previously, at the outset of the financial crisis, I
suggested
raising inflation to 4% or more for a period of a few years to deflate the debt overhang and accelerate wage adjustment.
Just recall the market’s “taper tantrums” in May 2013, when then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
suggested
a far more modest turn in monetary policy.
But it is also contemplating other macro-prudential instruments, such as a kind of Tobin tax, the levy on financial transactions first
suggested
in 1972 by the Nobel laureate economist James Tobin, in order to discourage volatile capital flows.
Complicating matters further, US President Donald Trump’s administration has espoused an “America first” doctrine that is largely inconsistent with what is being
suggested
here.
And, given the growing likelihood of additional trade barriers – as
suggested
by the US Commerce Department’s recent recommendations of high tariffs on aluminum and steel – the combination of protectionism and ever-widening trade imbalances becomes all the more problematic for a US economy set to become even more dependent on foreign capital.
Thus, in a long interview with the BBC before launching his new party, Musharraf
suggested
that Pakistan’s army was the only institution that could save the country from its current woes.
The actress Mia Farrow, for example,
suggested
that the 2008 Olympics might be remembered as “the genocide games.”
Of course, as Blair suggested, Britain’s first-past-the-post electoral system, based on single-member constituencies, implies huge advantages for the established political parties.
Instead, he embraced the views of a small group of dissident scientists who
suggested
other causes for AIDS.
Mbeki’s health minister, who notoriously
suggested
that AIDS could be cured by the use of garlic, lemon juice, and beetroot, was promptly fired.
Then again, both of those resignations
suggested
that the men in question had not taken the job seriously enough.
To be sure, many have
suggested
that the current crisis represents a vital opportunity to overcome these tensions and build an ever-closer union, citing the belief of Jean Monnet, one of the European Union’s main architects, that crises are critical to spur progress toward integration.
This is not a sign of great confidence in the
suggested
procedure.
North Korea’s fragility is
suggested
by the fact that even such an important political event as the Worker’s Party conference, held for the first time in three decades, was abruptly postponed earlier in September.
The falling yields at the Italian government’s last bond auctions in 2011
suggested
a significant reduction in the perceived sovereign-default risk.
But the Times neglected to mention that tests of the water’s temperature conducted simultaneously actually
suggested
that the situation was stabilizing.
The worst economic crisis of the twentieth century was explained – and a way to correct it
suggested
– with a theory that does not rely on bubbles.
It has
suggested
that central banks may want to consider higher inflation targets in order to avoid hitting the zero bound in the event of deflationary shocks.
Rodrigo de Rato, Zoellick’s counterpart at the European-dominated International Monetary Fund, has already
suggested
that his successor should be chosen in a more inclusive process.
He has
suggested
that “it might be good to raise income taxes on the poor so they had ‘skin in the game,’ and that proposals to repeal the carried-interest tax loophole – from which he personally benefits – were akin to the German invasion of Poland.”
He boldly
suggested
that the reason for sub-par growth over the last ten years is a fundamental structural change, identified as “secular stagnation”: the natural, or equilibrium, real (inflation-adjusted) interest rate may have fallen below zero – perhaps as low as negative 2-3% – “forever.”
In my book India: From Midnight to the Millennium, I suggested, only half-jokingly, that the question is whether NRI should stand for “Not Really Indian” or “Never Relinquished India.”
There is undoubtedly a utilitarian aspect to the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas celebrations, as
suggested
by the many parallel seminars being run by state governments to attract expatriate investment.
Some have
suggested
waiting to address this issue until 2012, when a revised protocol is supposed to come into effect.
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