Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
If it is true, the case against Karma
suggests
that officials stationed in Tibetan areas may be gaining more power, able to reach out beyond their jurisdictions to pursue what appear to be little more than personal grievances.
As a result, the Commission
suggests
that negotiations start with six additional countries: Bulgaria, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Romania, and Slovakia.
So, before we swallow all of the bad news, we should look at history, which
suggests
that technological change more often affects the nature of work, rather than the opportunity to participate in work itself.
It also
suggests
that, by failing to engage voters on the reality of migration, mainstream politicians in Europe are manufacturing support for extremist parties.
And recent US experience
suggests
that this can be a sustainable model.
But the complacency with which the political establishment accepts the disruption of Parliament
suggests
that even experienced politicians do not understand this.
Indeed, the recent publication by the official People’s Daily of two Chinese scholars’ commentary questioning Japan’s sovereignty over even Okinawa
suggests
that the authorities have scant interest in ending the dispute anytime soon.
The word stagnation
suggests
a swamp, implying a breeding ground for virulent dangers.
But the rhetoric of some Chinese, particularly in the military, concerning the South China Sea and other disputed Chinese sovereignty claims
suggests
that not everyone in the country’s leadership is committed wholeheartedly to such a path.
Our research examining US tax debates over the last 200 years
suggests
another reason: People can agree that taxation should be fair, but disagree fundamentally about the definition of “fair.”
But Europe's new eastern members can also act as a beacon for the Union, as Jacques Rupnik
suggests.
Still, even as technological change accelerates, nothing
suggests
a massive upward shift in unemployment over the next few decades.
Various theories draw on this basic framework – and each competing explanation
suggests
different strategies for reducing health inequalities.
This
suggests
that a reevaluation of the costs and benefits of FDI was already underway, led, interestingly enough, by developed countries, which in the past had championed liberalization of entry and operational conditions for foreign investors and their protection under international law.
Back in 2011, I should have read Keynes’s General Theory a little further, to where he
suggests
that “when the capital development of a country becomes a by-product of the activities of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done.”
But while money certainly matters, the evidence
suggests
that development outcomes are determined more by factors like state capacity and national policies, and crucially, a supportive global environment.
As Russia suggests, without popular support, wealth is protected only by increasingly coercive measures.
Using this figure as a rough indicator of willingness to pay for proper measurement and monitoring
suggests
that the post-2015 goals should include just four targets.
This tendency at times of economic downturn
suggests
that SWFs are not the long-term, stable shareholders of foreign firms that they (and some commentators) claim themselves to be.
History
suggests
that the hope for a self-sustained recovery in Europe might well prove deceptive; almost always, the European economic cycle has followed and reinforced that of the US.
But his immense popularity over the past five years
suggests
that most Bolivians do not seem very worried in putting their country’s democracy at risk.
In fact, Snowden’s warning that “any NSA analyst, at any time, can target anyone, from a federal judge to the president”
suggests
that NSA head Keith Alexander – dubbed “Emperor Alexander” – could already be more powerful than Obama.
This
suggests
that lost innovation, not trade, is the main culprit.
While this argument
suggests
that the global trading system must make more room for a rising China (and India), it overlooks the need to address the enormous structural problems in China’s domestic sectors if export-led growth is to become sustainable.
But Keynes’s emphatic tone
suggests
that he believed in his own taxonomy of needs.
Close examination
suggests
that the single biggest difference between those at or above the top tenth percentile of the income distribution and those below the 50th percentile is that the former have a degree or two while the latter, typically, do not.
The May government’s recent behavior
suggests
that it is putting the new US administration’s interests before those of the EU and the rest of the world.
In fact, research by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change strongly
suggests
that a business-as-usual approach would lead to an era of irreversible environmental destruction that would preclude economic growth.
The ability to appreciate the long-term earnings potential of Silicon Valley and firms like Apple, Amazon, and Facebook
suggests
that more is going on in the US stock market than a relentless focus on short-term financial performance.
And Saif al-Islam’s recent support for his father
suggests
that he is not the liberal reformer many took him to be.
Back
Next
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People