Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
The Peruvian example
suggests
that governments can beat insurgents by severing their control over local communities’ rights and assets, which will always be established in a social contract.
All of this
suggests
that a substantial share of the decline in productivity growth may not be the result of some deep problem with resource allocation or some consequence of exogenous technological innovation cycles over which we have little control.
Where available, evidence
suggests
that they are mainly girls at the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum – often members of ethnic minorities with no health-care coverage.
But history
suggests
that simply suspending security aid – economic assistance and military training are set to continue – will not be enough to bring about meaningful change in Pakistan (which also counts China and Saudi Arabia among its benefactors).
The recently released Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) National Balance Sheet Report
suggests
that China is unlikely to undergo a foreign-exchange or national insolvency crisis.
History
suggests
that, while we may not know what the high-return inventions of the future will be, we can be confident that there will be some.
Yet the efforts in 2008 to unite the Democratic Party weren’t as successful as the conventional wisdom
suggests.
The finding
suggests
that in plough-using societies, patriarchal values circumscribed female mobility, and allowed men – as a result of their greater economic contribution – to undermine women’s autonomy.
The most ominous case, however, was Germany in the 1930s, which systematically shredded the European order that had emerged after World War I.History
suggests
that a revisionist power can be disciplined in two ways.
The absence of such a plan in the US (and in Europe) has contributed to the decoupling of financial markets from inclusive economic progress, because it
suggests
that current trends are politically sustainable.
Glenn Beck’s assault on Soros – and the unmistakable stench of its atrocious antecedents –
suggests
what sort of revolution they may have in mind.
This, together with the rule that all decisions, even in the area of state aid, must be approved by a majority of Commissioners,
suggests
that the Commission is set to become much more lenient on state aid and competition policy.
President Barack Obama seems to be offering a needed boost to American leadership after the dark days of George W. Bush; but the mood in Davos
suggests
that optimism and confidence may be short-lived.
An estimate of the market value of Boston’s property portfolio
suggests
that the city’s real estate alone is worth some $55 billion.
Indeed, the example of Kosovo
suggests
the wisdom of not entangling humanitarian action in notions of deterrence or punishment.
Indeed, the emergence of international criminal tribunals
suggests
that accountability for crimes against international law ought to be a matter addressed by independent courts, not by the unilateral exercise of military power.
More troubling, research
suggests
that as local stations reap revenue windfalls from election campaign advertising, reporting on the candidates’ claims becomes off-limits.
As for fiscal measures, the empirical evidence
suggests
that three-quarters of consumption is based on longer-term economic prospects, not short-run disposable income.
History
suggests
that it would be one of entrepreneurial people (alert to unnoticed opportunities, and exercising their initiative to try out new things) and innovative people (imagining new things, developing new concepts into commercial products and methods, and marketing them to potential).
The UK’s rationale for its refusal – that no protocol was included in the treaty exempting the financial sector from certain regulations –
suggests
that similar outcomes can be expected in future negotiations.
An abundance of cranes in Managua
suggests
a boom in office construction.
This
suggests
that macroeconomic policies, though necessary, are insufficient without parallel institutional reforms in planning, regulation, and bankruptcy procedures to enforce credit discipline for all borrowers, regardless of whether they are in the private sector or state-owned.
This should be reason enough to continue the report; indeed, the fact that China has the world’s highest investment rate
suggests
that, despite the Doing Business indicators, it is possible to do business there.
Statistical evidence
suggests
that this relationship will weaken once the real-estate market recovers, but this remains a long-run prospect.
Fortunately, research
suggests
that such habits can be broken.
The Argentine experience
suggests
that, after the run on bank deposits, the saga’s next installment is monetary collapse.
Here, the Argentine story suggests, the mechanism loops back to the banks: firms soon start complaining that their income is now denominated in neo-drachmas while their loans remain in euros.
The hyper-speed of Globalization 2.0
suggests
the need for quicker triggers and wider coverage for worker retraining, relocation allowances, job-search assistance, wage insurance for older workers, and longer-duration unemployment benefits.
But the experience of 2004-2008
suggests
that moderate appreciation is not enough.
We can now find new patterns that are not readily evident to the human observer – and this already
suggests
ways to lower energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions.
Back
Next
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People