Supervision
in sentence
353 examples of Supervision in a sentence
This increase would be above what microprudential
supervision
– assessing the risks to individual institutions – might dictate.
Although emerging economies have since accumulated larger foreign-exchange reserves and strengthened financial
supervision
and regulation, they remain vulnerable to external shocks, especially from the US, the eurozone, and Japan.
With little or no regulatory
supervision
in most of the world, companies like Facebook, Google, Amazon, Alibaba, and Tencent used techniques common in propaganda and casino gambling, such as constant notifications and variable rewards, to foster psychological addiction.
In the United States, introducing computers has even been detrimental when not backed by parental
supervision
and teacher guidance.
The sense of a professional ethic is conveyed by clauses in the oath that require managers to “develop both myself and other managers under my
supervision
so that the profession continues to grow and contribute to the well-being of society.”
When my time under police
supervision
ended, the prosecutor’s office quickly brought a new criminal case of slander against me.
Indeed, any reasonable reading of the resolution – especially in the context of the conflict-ridden Balkans over the past two decades – would acknowledge that independence would satisfy the resolution’s intent and the purpose of sustaining UN
supervision
of the province for the past eight years.
But Europe’s policymakers claim to be making progress toward a so-called “banking union,” which means collective banking supervision, rather than a merger of banks themselves.
In the case of the banking union, they plan to use Article 127(6) of the Lisbon Treaty which allows the European Council to grant authority to the ECB to perform specific tasks concerning “policies relating to the prudential supervision” of certain financial institutions in the Union.
The importance of these structures is that they insulate the central bank’s monetary-policy independence from corruption by the tighter accountability requirements that inevitably come with banking
supervision.
The eurozone needs a banking union: a European deposit-insurance scheme in order to stem capital flight, a European source for financing bank recapitalization, and eurozone-wide
supervision
and regulation.
The US wants the world to embark on macroeconomic stimulus programs, and thinks that the complicated task of reinventing and reordering financial
supervision
and regulation can wait.
Financial
supervision
has been placed at the EU level, rather than being delegated to national authorities.
In this scenario, market
supervision
would replace political
supervision.
AU commanders on the ground would retain tactical control, a joint AU-UN command would exercise operational supervision, and the UN would establish the force’s overall strategic objectives.
The principal culprits in the crisis were, rather, lax
supervision
and regulation of US financial institutions and markets, which allowed unsound practices and financial excesses to build up.
There are better ways to enhance stability, from strengthening prudential
supervision
to taxing and controlling destabilizing capital flows and letting the exchange rate adjust.
As governments improve their capacity for supervision, coordination, and regulation of the TVET system, actual skills training should be shifted to the private sector, thereby transforming the current supply-driven system to one that responds effectively to changing market demand.
The euro, they said, had to be buttressed by transferring banking
supervision
to a European authority.
Indeed, those remaining in the West Bank will be under the
supervision
not only of Israeli security forces – who know everything they need to know – but also of the Palestinian Authority.
Moreover, the IMF announced a new financing program called a “Precautionary Credit Line,” which will provide funds more quickly and with even fewer conditions – even to countries without “sound public finance” and “effective financial supervision.”
But that will require strong international supervision, resembling today’s EU Protectorate in Bosnia.
The left, by contrast, believes that markets, particularly financial markets, need considerable government regulation and
supervision
to function well; gives greater weight to public goods (for example, parks, a clean environment, and mass-transit systems); seeks to reduce economic inequality, believing that it undermines democracy and the sense of fairness that is important to well-being; and is more willing to pursue international cooperation as a means to secure peace and provide global public goods, such as climate protection.
And it calls for not only common financial regulation, but also for eurozone-wide
supervision
of financial institutions, including common deposit insurance and a shared bank-resolution scheme.
Even during the crisis, banks’ capital-adequacy ratios were higher than the Basel II requirement of 8%, and their distribution of profits has been under the BRSA’s close
supervision
since 2008.
Most host countries have limited resources to penetrate the complex structures of sprawling financial groups, and their powers to enforce regulation and
supervision
are limited.
We believe that an effect-based approach, based on an agreed threshold, would minimize the negative consequences of more host-country intervention in regulation and
supervision.
Financial regulation and
supervision
will surely be strengthened, but they will remain national in character, with little safeguard against cross-border spillover and regulatory arbitrage.
As Johnson pointed out in his Congressional testimony, “solutions that depend on smarter, better regulatory
supervision
and corrective action ignore the political constraint on regulation and the political power of big banks.”
This is good news for both financial stability and public finances: once the single supervisor is in place,
supervision
will be more credible and impartial, which is important for dealing with ailing banks and managing their return to viability.
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