Suggests
in sentence
2007 examples of Suggests in a sentence
But a new study by Sam Langfield of the ECB and Marco Pagano of the University of Naples
suggests
that the longer-term implications are even more damaging than was previously suspected.
And the same applies to the increasing demand for energy: although the region as a whole is rich in energy resources, their uneven geographical distribution
suggests
that any viable solution must be built on cooperation.
Her populist stance on the chaebol
suggests
that, if elected, she might similarly pander to nationalist sentiment by taking a tough stance against Japan, especially to play down her father’s service in Japan’s military while Korea was under Japanese colonial rule.
This
suggests
that the government’s policy of shifting gradually to a market-based exchange rate may have been better executed than generally believed; even the measures to support the stock market now look less futile than they did in July.
But, as the description of these arrangements as “transitional” suggests, they cannot last indefinitely.
But the evidence
suggests
that the riots in Lhasa and elsewhere were an expression of Tibetan frustration at years of Chinese control and repression.
A simple comparison of the pace of the evolution of microbes and their multicellular hosts
suggests
a millionfold or billionfold advantage to the microbe.
Experience with alcohol
suggests
that marijuana will be available to underage users (as it is now), whatever the minimum legal age.
Experience with alcohol
suggests
that these approaches may modestly reduce, but not eliminate, the harms associated with use, especially if sellers are allowed to promote their wares.
But recent evidence
suggests
that large changes, caused by the absorption of a chunk of alien genetic material, may be just as significant.
Moreover, the recent election – in which the Conservatives’ 20-point lead disappeared seemingly overnight, as voters, especially young people, threw their support behind Labour –
suggests
that British voters are up for grabs.
Countless heartrending stories of lost husbands, wives, siblings, and children, to say nothing of homes and livelihoods destroyed, provide yet more troubling evidence of how Syria’s civil war has become a regional conflict (as the bombing of Iran’s Beirut embassy suggests).
Fortunately, the experience of the 1980s
suggests
a way forward.
The Iraq war was ostensibly launched because of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction, yet each passing day
suggests
that the threat was exaggerated.
Two of the three psychological causes suggest continued upward momentum in housing prices, while the third
suggests
that the momentum will come to an end some day, but does not pinpoint when.
Yet a glance at today’s headlines
suggests
that what is most likely to kill and displace millions, if not hundreds of millions, of people in the coming decades are global threats such as pandemics, climate change, and terrorist and criminal networks – not inter-state war.
But all the mathematics in economics is not, as Taleb suggests, charlatanism.
Other Copenhagen Consensus research
suggests
that scaling up government e-procurement platforms would be transformative.
US President Barack Obama’s recent summit with 40 African heads of state and more than 200 US and African business leaders
suggests
a new, more confident mood.
The tone set by Murdoch, however,
suggests
that a consensus on sustainable, inclusive growth will be hard to achieve.
Hindsight
suggests
that the authorities should have done just that.
Why don’t all nations join currency areas, or why not create a single global currency, as Nobel laureate Robert Mundell
suggests?
That Britain plans to fund construction of a new aircraft carrier, but not the planes to fly off of it,
suggests
that resources for the new entente will be sorely lacking.
But, while the many recipes thesis has strong appeal and empirical support, and
suggests
a spirit of theoretical pluralism, the claim of “one economics” is misguided, for it implies that mainstream neoclassical economics is the only true economics.
Must the US, as Henry Kissinger
suggests
in his latest book On China, consider the prospect of a “Pacific Community” that, unlike the Cold War-era Atlantic Community, is not based on common culture and values in the face of a direct threat, but on common interests in an “age of rebalancing of world order”?
The response to the current influx of mostly non-European refugees and migrants
suggests
that this worldview – shaped by fear of the unknown – remains pervasive in Central Europe today.
In the NIC’s view, the multi-faceted nature of US power
suggests
that even as China overtakes America economically – perhaps as early as the 2020’s – the US will most likely maintain global leadership alongside other great powers in 2030.
Likewise, the NIC report
suggests
that Americans must learn better how to exercise power with as well as over other states.
The Arab Spring
suggests
that improved economic performance cannot be viewed as an insurance policy against political instability.
Although the complex situation in Egypt
suggests
that its leaders will be preoccupied with domestic politics for some time, the new government will also try to redefine its relations with neighboring countries.
Back
Related words
Evidence
Which
Their
Recent
Research
Countries
About
Economic
Would
History
There
Should
Experience
Could
While
Growth
Other
Political
Global
People