Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
But the state of infrastructure in the US
suggests
that many decision-makers do not share this view.
Recent volatility in stocks and bonds
suggests
that these risks could prove vexing to financial markets as well.
The rise of transnational forces and non-state actors, not to mention emerging powers like China,
suggests
that there are big changes on the horizon.
Having found their own alternatives for most of what the Bank does, their indifference to a second term for Kim
suggests
that they simply don’t think the Bank matters much anymore.
As its behavior since 2014 suggests, the Russian government considers the post-revolutionary status quo in Ukraine – in particular, the country’s headlong rush toward the West – a direct threat to Russian national security.
But policymakers are not doing this, which
suggests
that they have prioritized largely political considerations over fiscal prudence.
Against this background, Russia’s recent military spending binge is all the more notable, for it
suggests
that the government, desperate to retain popular support amid declining economic performance, is less interested in investing in the most modern equipment than in showing its support for the rebels in eastern Ukraine, even at the price of further economic hardship.
It
suggests
that seriously challenging the nuclear venture will come not from more timid sanctions now, but from measures that encourage the pragmatists who populate the fractious Iranian government to promote normalization.
This
suggests
that what the Bush administration has been doing – slowly ratcheting up the pressure through the use of diplomacy to create an international coalition that now includes the Russians – is the proper course to be on.
Trump is likely to be a leading proponent of this tack; in fact, even regional trade deals may be ruled out, as his opposition to ratifying the 12-country Trans-Pacific Partnership
suggests.
Mercantilism suggests, among other things, that Germany is the world’s strongest economy, because it has the largest current-account surplus.
Recent research
suggests
that efforts to eliminate cancers may actually hasten the emergence of resistance and tumor recurrence, thus reducing a patient’s chances of survival.
This
suggests
that resistant cells are not so unfit that drug-sensitive cells completely out-competed them, but that they struggle to proliferate when both types are present.
It
suggests
a mere midpoint, as if the ideas of the center were just a combination of right and left.
The Swedish home-furniture giant Ikea’s recent announcement that it will open two new plants in northwest Italy
suggests
that Scandinavians are taking note of Monti’s Nordic tastes.
China’s stationing of its own troops in the Pakistani part of Kashmir for years, ostensibly to protect its ongoing strategic projects there, betrays its lack of confidence in Pakistani security arrangements – and
suggests
that China will continue to enlarge its military footprint in Pakistan.
The evidence today
suggests
that this pattern can be repeated when the United States departs Mesopotamia and leaves Iraqis to define their own fate.
History
suggests
that, in fits and starts, Iraq, like Vietnam and Lebanon, will find itself able to sort out its own affairs.
Ask a waiter for a steak knife and you will draw a look that
suggests
you've asked for a sword.
Yet the recent spate of central bank actions and their timing (notwithstanding considerable diversity in terms of domestic economic conditions)
suggests
that interest-rate cuts and nonconventional forms of easing, if not competitive, are certainly contagious.
This demographic challenge to South Korea’s status quo
suggests
a “liberal” awakening that could completely alter the country’s political landscape.
In contrast, Russia’s timing
suggests
that Vladimir Putin seeks to accomplish its aggressive aims ahead of the US elections, thus avoid beginning relations with the next president on an overtly confrontational note.
It
suggests
support for agriculture and agribusiness development and linking them with other sectors, as well as measures to boost resilience to price shocks.
But the evidence emerging from successive rounds of QE in the UK and the US
suggests
that while it did lower bond yields, the extra money was largely retained within the banking system, and never reached the real economy.
McKinsey’s research
suggests
that shale energy and big-data technologies will be game changers with similar benefits for the economy’s potential growth over the next several years.
Unfortunately, our research
suggests
the opposite has happened.
The observation that recoveries following a financial crisis are different
suggests
that standard macroeconomic policies might not work as one would usually expect.
And a transatlantic comparison
suggests
that this may indeed be the case.
History
suggests
that interest rates will not remain at record-low levels indefinitely, and that when change comes, it might be abrupt.
This
suggests
that markets could potentially become extremely fragmented, such that consumers’ choices will be strictly limited to the offerings that have been selected according to their data profiles.
Back
Next
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People