Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
This
suggests
that the trajectory of we "moderns" in our transformations since the end of the Ice Age has varied enormously in material culture.
The archaeology of early modern and Neanderthal populations
suggests
that we are not the chosen people who received from God the light, the divine mandate to go forth, multiply, and eliminate their subhuman neighbors.
The fact that Greece nonetheless is effectively trying to destroy Golden Dawn – the parliament just voted to freeze the party’s state funding –
suggests
that, in the end, most democracies will want to draw the line somewhere.
Finally, though some evidence
suggests
that there is an over-supply of university graduates in China, ongoing demographic and sectoral shifts mean that China will encounter a supply deficit of 24 million highly skilled graduates of universities or higher-level vocational schools by 2020.
Whilst the Dutch Medical Association does not oppose the profession’s role in the practice of euthanasia, current evidence
suggests
a continuing unwillingness on the part of Dutch doctors to report cases of assistance in dying to the authorities, and a return to practices that are closer to a medical context, such as terminal sedation.
I beg to differ; my reading of the evidence
suggests
that donors really do need to take extreme care not to make things worse, and that this is far more difficult to achieve in corrupt countries than the UN
suggests.
But the financial crisis in the fast-growing city of Wenzhou, triggered by bad loans,
suggests
otherwise – not least because the economy has yet to recover fully.
A passing familiarity with the Realpolitik of climate change
suggests
that this is an intimidating – if not intractable – challenge, displaying elements of the most difficult political and social quandaries: the prisoner’s dilemma, the free-rider problem, and the tragedy of the commons.
This
suggests
that some countries are more efficient at social welfare than others.
Job creation, where it has taken place, has followed a different path than history
suggests
it should.
Not even the “Great Recession” of 2007-2009 was as global as conventional wisdom in the developed countries
suggests.
The FCA proposal
suggests
that this assumption may no longer be credible, at least not in a United Kingdom hurtling toward Brexit, which has put the City of London’s reputation as a leading global financial center at risk.
Such firms are also accumulating financial assets – sometimes faster than they are accumulating corporate debt – which
suggests
that they lack profitable long-term investment opportunities and portfolio-investment options in liberalized financial markets.
This
suggests
that easy access to cheap money and debt financing have not favored the high-tech sectors that contribute the most to productivity growth.
In particular, recent research
suggests
four key policy areas in which governments should consider intervening.
But while theory
suggests
that flexible exchange rates should blunt foreign monetary or financial shocks, in practice, such a currency regime rarely works on its own.
Game theory
suggests
that some of the most unpredictable conflicts are between a weak, but determined, combatant and a strong opponent with much less commitment.
Indeed, contrary to the widely held assumption that evolution takes millennia to manifest itself, recent evidence
suggests
that its effects can become visible as quickly as in a few generations.
But the long history of global anchor currencies
suggests
that the dollar’s days on top may be far from over.
But the frequent discovery of Roman coins in India
suggests
that Roman coinage continued to be accepted internationally long after it must have been obvious that its gold or silver content had fallen.
The evidence on this point is not as definitive as one might like, but what we have – for example, from the work of Princeton University’s Larry Bartels –
suggests
that over the past 50 years, virtually the entire US political elite has stopped sharing the preferences of low- or middle-income voters.
Argentina’s experience
suggests
that after a change of policy, recovery can follow surprisingly quickly.
Similarly, extensive experience in both developed and developing countries
suggests
that privatization often leads to disaster when undertaken in the middle of a fiscal crisis.
This
suggests
that there are economies of scale in running businesses that favor large countries.
The fact that firms incur the cost of business travel
suggests
that, for some key tasks, it is easier to move brains than it is to move the relevant information to the brains.
Moreover, the fact that business travel is growing faster than the global economy
suggests
that output is becoming more intensive in know-how and that know-how is diffusing through brain mobility.
And, finally, the huge diversity of business travel intensity
suggests
that some countries are deploying or demanding much more know-how than others.
Nayar
suggests
that it has long been known that the reactor’s design contained basic flaws, though only the Japanese authorities can verify this.
The French and others fear that this derogation could permit the UK, in search of competitive advantage, to loosen financial regulation in London, even though recent evidence
suggests
that bank capital requirements, and other controls on banks’ activities, are in fact now tighter in London than elsewhere in Europe.
For example, there is no European equivalent of the British requirement to “ring-fence” retail and commercial banking, and the French and German governments’ opposition
suggests
that there is unlikely to be one.
Back
Next
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People