Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
The current high-stakes conundrum faced by policymakers
suggests
that they should apply inflation-targeting principles more flexibly in the context of a major economic shock.
This record
suggests
that one should think twice before trying shock therapy again.
If Iraq's prospects are as dismal as my analysis suggests, any international contribution to the US-driven reconstruction effort is likely to be little more than money flushed down the drain.
That is deeply problematic, and it
suggests
that many citizens are throwing out the good information with the bad.
It further rightly
suggests
that NATO’s strategic political and military objectives could be achieved jointly with Russia through greater stability, mutual transparency, predictability, and arms reduction verified by non-proliferation and arms control agreements.
Although there have been challenges along the way, the GMS’s progress so far
suggests
that it could eliminate the Plasmodium falciparum parasite by 2025, and eliminate malaria completely by 2030, at the latest.
There, the extreme right threatened to shut down the US government, confirming what game theory suggests: when those who are irrationally committed to destruction if they don’t get their way confront rational individuals, the former prevail.
In both examples – congressional tickets and organ sales – Sandel
suggests
reducing money’s role.
Hamada oddly
suggests
that proponents of monetary finance ignore this risk; but in my own IMF paper, and in Bernanke’s recent blog post, it is a central concern.
That experience
suggests
a better strategy for both Europe and the rest of the world.
Indeed, the number of recent changes in the North Korean hierarchy strongly
suggests
serious domestic opposition to the continuance of Kim’s misbegotten rule.
The mere fact that they have emerged in no way
suggests
that China is headed for disaster; that would be the case only if these problems were allowed to persist.
But, as the rising tide of tax evasion suggests, these mechanisms amount only to a cat game of and mouse problem – and the mice, it seems, are winning.
Some evidence
suggests
that there is a link between the level of dopamine, addiction, and greedy behavior.
My own recent research
suggests
that although countries that ratify treaties usually have better human rights records than countries that do not, countries with the worst human rights records actually ratify many treaties as often as nations with the best practices.
As Ash suggests, there is a strong ethical case for saying that it is wrong for leaders to give absolute priority to the interests of their own citizens.
Indeed, traditional balance-of-power theory
suggests
that US primacy in power resources should be offset by a Sino-Russian partnership.
But history
suggests
a simpler explanation: A decade of steadily rising oil prices had emboldened Russia, leaving it ready to seize any opportunity to deploy its military power.
The recent price slide – to $50-60 per barrel, halving the value of Russia’s oil production –
suggests
that history is about to repeat itself.
Poland is the exception that
suggests
what might have been.
By contrast, the World Bank’s Government Effectiveness Indicator
suggests
that countries that, given their income level, have relatively effective governments or improve their performance, do tend to grow faster.
The empirical evidence
suggests
that tax cuts are more likely than spending increases to spur growth, and that lower spending is more likely than tax hikes to consolidate budgets effectively.
Despite baseless politically motivated claims to the contrary, the academic research still overwhelmingly
suggests
that very high debt is a drag on long-term growth.
As the name suggests, they are triggered indiscriminately by weight – the foot of a child, a teenager’s bicycle, or an elderly man walking to market.
The employment cost index
suggests
that wage increases so far have been surprisingly low.
And, indeed, the evidence
suggests
that China was larger (in terms of purchasing power parity) than any other economy in the world until around 1889, when the US eclipsed it.
In other words, Americans have much farther to go on the road to balance-sheet repair – which hardly
suggests
a temporary, or cyclical, shortfall in consumer demand.
Second, as the Pew poll suggests, today's weakening of democratic culture usually takes the form of nostalgia for strong leadership - a clear incitement to launching coups.
Research by the World Bank
suggests
that every dollar of assistance provided to support trade-facilitation reform in developing countries yields a return of up to $70 in economic benefits.
This demand
suggests
that the US should subsidize the flow of technology to India and China from US firms holding patents, which is highly impractical.
Back
Next
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People