Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
This
suggests
that rapidly reducing emissions may sometimes even help to maintain a firm’s competitiveness.
The closeness of the result
suggests
Bush won less of a mandate for change than he seems to believe.
A seminal study from Jamaica
suggests
that early childhood interventions can make a world of difference.
This
suggests
that he could upend conventions that have often been damaging to Palestine, transforming the rules of the game.
AMLO’s behavior after losing the 2006 presidential election by just 0.5% of the vote
suggests
what may lie in store.
And Spain’s recent general election, held three days after the Brexit referendum,
suggests
that, despite high unemployment, austerity, and painful structural reforms, moderate, pro-European forces remain a majority.
Finally, economic theory
suggests
that globalization can be made to benefit all as long as the winners compensate the losers.
A recent analysis
suggests
that, in rural areas, a 30% increase in upstream tree cover produces a 4% reduction in the probability of diarrheal disease in children – a result comparable to investing in an improved sanitation facility.
He strikingly
suggests
that we could think about these quarter-century changes in terms of what happened over the past 24 hours: seen this way, just in the last day, average life expectancy increased by 9.5 hours; 137,000 people escaped extreme poverty; and 305,000 got access to safer drinking water.
And woe betide anyone who
suggests
that Russia’s malign interference in the election has anything to do with Trump’s own warmth toward Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Yet his language
suggests
that his personal bond with Bush somehow took precedence over his duty as Prime Minister.
The Chinese census
suggests
that there are 118.6 boys being born for every 100 girls.
Yet history also
suggests
that shocks of the scale and scope of the current refugee crisis have the potential to spur remarkable policy responses.
On the contrary, recent research by Nobel laureate economist George Akerlof and his colleagues
suggests
that pushing inflation too low may impede growth, and that the critical threshold is higher for countries, such as the post-communist transition economies, engaged in large structural changes.
Successful deployment of hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) technology in Xinjiang
suggests
that China, like America, will soon be able to draw on its own reserves of shale energy.
But the fact that countries have continued to pursue trade liberalization, however gradually, at a time of weak economic growth,
suggests
that free trade is here to stay.
History, therefore,
suggests
caution before concluding that the current recovery has the makings of a more sustainable and broad-based variety.
Some evidence
suggests
that the prevalence of uncertainty may boost competition, thereby sparking innovation.
But nationalism
suggests
the lack of a coherent conception of Georgia’s interests.
The commission
suggests
policies that could be implemented sooner.
Moreover, Catalonia’s experience with home rule
suggests
that its chances of becoming a top-performing country are slim.
It
suggests
that if we fail to address antimicrobial resistance, the problem will grow worse.
Firstly, China succeeded in lowering its energy consumption per unit of GDP by 1.79%, 4.04% and 4.59% respectively for 2006, 2007, and 2008, which strongly
suggests
the prospect of meeting the 20% objective by 2010.
This
suggests
that, for the UK, mega-regional trade agreements – which provide access to multiple markets, but entail lower levels of fiscal and regulatory integration than the EU – are the best way forward.
Rosenhan’s experiment
suggests
that questions about Trump’s mental health might never go away, no matter what steps he takes to change his detractors’ minds.
Whereas the standard story – the one that motivated the drive to liberalize capital flows – is that developing countries are saving-constrained, the fact that capital is moving outward rather than inward in the most successful developing countries
suggests
that the constraint lies elsewhere.
They buttress their argument with empirical work that
suggests
that growth in developing countries has become progressively more dependent on China’s economic performance.
But poor nations could have shifted the “burden” onto rich countries, where, economic logic suggests, it ought to be placed.
There’s good reason to worry, for the experience of the 1930’s
suggests
that exchange-rate disputes can be even more dangerous than deep slumps in terms of generating protectionist pressures.
The contrast
suggests
that a good share of Brazil trouble is homemade.
Back
Next
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People