Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
Past experience
suggests
that there are five guidelines to follow if we want a more effective European presence on the world stage whenever foreign and security policy are at the top of the agenda.
Conventional wisdom
suggests
that Scottish independence is possible, albeit not very likely, while any country’s departure from the single currency is fanciful.
Indeed, the fit is even better than the graph suggests, because the GDP figures shown for 2011-2012 have been revised upward – that is, they were expected to be worse.
If Yanukovych has not amnestied Tymoshenko by then, the EU can, as the Polish MEP Jacek Saryusz-Wolski suggests, wait for a Ukrainian president that will uphold EU values.
History
suggests
that once an insurgency reaches “critical mass,” it takes a decade or more to eradicate it.
And a recent study by McKinsey
suggests
that the gaps in educational opportunity and attainment by income impose the equivalent of a permanent recession of 3-5% of GDP on the US economy.
What Greenspan
suggests
is that the labor market flexibility gap between the US and Europe may be more important in explaining relative economic performance than the alleged technology gap.
Centuries of experience with financial crises, including in countries with FTTs, strongly
suggests
otherwise.
The United States has commenced its “pivot” to Asia, and its relations with China, in particular, seem constantly to be flirting with Thucydides’s trap, the historical pattern that
suggests
that a rising power will inevitably collide with a reigning power.
Experience
suggests
that the British are most resilient, most inventive, and happiest when they feel in control of their own future.
Given this possibility, McAfee suggests, we may need to re-build our societies so that, as intelligent machines increase productivity, the declining demand for human work has welfare-enhancing outcomes like higher (and more equitably distributed) incomes and more leisure time.
Moreover, an influential paper by the American economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff
suggests
that economic growth falls sharply when a country’s public debt rises above 90% of GDP.
For these countries, it matters whether history
suggests
that there is a strong threshold effect once public debt exceeds 90% of GDP.
Chen’s record
suggests
he will hang on to his failed presidency.
While the EAU is still only a customs union, the European Union’s experience
suggests
that a successful free-trade area leads over time to broader economic, monetary, and eventually political integration.
That
suggests
willful ignorance of the negotiating process.
Indeed, with China bent on unification, it refuses even to define relations with Taiwan as "bilateral," while China's growing global influence
suggests
that Taiwan's diplomatic fortunes are not about to improve.
Our research
suggests
several strategies to achieve this outcome.
Recent empirical evidence
suggests
that the central and eastern European regions benefiting most from EU membership are those around the country’s capital city or sharing a border with one of the 15 countries.
As the Mumbai attack five years ago and the recent LoC incidents have shown, the gap between Pakistan’s official statements and its military’s actions
suggests
that the civilian government, even if sincere, is too weak to control its own security apparatus.
And the unexpected election outcome, backed by strong evidence from polling,
suggests
that public attitudes concerning the free movement of people are more nuanced and less hostile than May’s rhetoric and the Conservative manifesto had assumed.
In Germany, the breakdown of coalition negotiations between the Christian Democratic Union, the Christian Social Union, the Free Democrats, and the Greens
suggests
that a political realignment may be necessary there, too.
Lever
suggests
that it was as much the memory of the currency collapse of 1945-1948 as of the hyperinflation of the 1920s that drove home this lesson.
All of this
suggests
that the “soft austerity” pursued in many eurozone countries may have been the right choice after all.
The fact that the eurozone’s recovery is now catching up with that of the US, despite its lack of any continuing stimulus,
suggests
that the answer is no.
Indeed, the experience of the eurozone
suggests
that while concerted fiscal stimulus can make a difference during an acute recession, withdrawing that stimulus when it is no longer vital is preferable to maintaining it indefinitely.
Current Commission President José Manuel Barroso
suggests
that ideologically like-minded political parties running in the next European Parliament elections should intensify their cooperation in political “families” that would then jointly nominate candidates for the Commission presidency.
This
suggests
that, within the two-year period, the UK’s best hope is to complete a framework agreement with the EU.
A similar analysis of many other advanced economies
suggests
that, as in the US, the bottom is quite close but it has not yet been reached.
Again, an analogy with household debt readily
suggests
itself.
Back
Next
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People