Supported
in sentence
1670 examples of Supported in a sentence
In general, deleveraging by households, governments, and financial institutions should be gradual – and
supported
by currency weakening – if we are to avoid a double-dip recession and a worsening of deflation.
The search for higher yields drove investors and speculators to developing countries, where the inflows increased leverage, propped up equity prices, and in some cases
supported
a commodity price boom.
Indeed, he has gone on the counter-attack, notably against the BBC, which had not exactly
supported
the war with enthusiasm.
The international community, led by the “Quartet” (the United States, the European Union, the United Nations, and Russia), has put three conditions to the Hamas government if it wishes to achieve international legitimacy and continue to be
supported
financially.
Moreover, the country’s banking system is
supported
by its rich neighbor’s demonstrated willingness to act as a lender of last resort.
Yet the largest bloc of voters in the December 1993 democratic elections, which were weighted in favor of traditional political parties,
supported
Refah, or Welfare, Turkey's largest Islamist party.
Mashal also offered Abbas a one-year mandate for negotiations with Israel, and, unlike Haniyeh,
supported
recent Israeli-Palestinian “exploratory talks” in Jordan.
The AfDB’s Trade Finance Program, established in February 2013, has so far
supported
more than 85 domestic banks in 27 African countries, catalyzing approximately $3.4 billion in trade in vital sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing and construction, and energy.
Collectively, the Germans had not been the innocent victims of a small gang of criminal outsiders called “Nazis” – Nazism had been an inside ideology
supported
by millions of Germans, and every German was liable for its atrocities whether or not he or she had adhered to it individually.
Interestingly, many of the people who
supported
these reforms also favored “strong leaders.”
These barriers are
supported
by deep-pocketed, self-serving corporations and lobby groups, and defended by politicians who are scared that the redistribution of jobs, income, and wealth resulting from freer trade will reduce their chances of remaining in power.
The world has undergone massive economic deregulation, prescribed by the monetarist doctrine
supported
by the conservative forces dominant in the developed countries of North America, Europe, and the Far East.
Supported
by the traditional economic theories taught at most universities, this approach was energized after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the disintegration of the Soviet Union, when the former communist countries, together with China, joined the Western-dominated world order, boosting total production and consumption.
The US has
supported
anti-Putin forces since 2008, but ramped up that support in 2011, when Putin, then the prime minister, prepared to return to the presidency.
For his part, Obama
supported
the Arab Spring uprisings, but offered no pro-democratic strategy – an approach that has led Libya to become a failed state, Egypt to become even more dictatorial, and Syria to collapse into nightmarish and protracted conflict.
This includes the core leadership of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, which is now
supported
by Hezbollah and Iraqi militias, as much as the ISIS, which is composed largely of non-Syrian fighters who are unconcerned about rebuilding the country or safeguarding its people’s future.
It has
supported
global prosperity and stability for 70 years.
Much more worrying, however, is what lurks unmentioned behind the Treasury report: a serious legislative effort,
supported
by the Trump administration, to reduce the level of scrutiny applied to banks that are on the verge of becoming systemically important.
For almost seven decades, the US and its allies have repeatedly intervened (or
supported
internally-led coups) to oust governments that were not sufficiently under their thumb.
France
supported
a military coup the following year.
The US has
supported
police states in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Central Asia, because the alternative is thought to be worse.
Selective migration policies and talent-friendly environments
supported
at the European level could significantly improve the net skill migration balance, which is currently negative or zero in all EU countries.
The regulation was
supported
by religious groups for moral reasons, but also by bootleggers, because they had the market to themselves on Sundays.
Such a network would be based on multi-directional flows of renewable energy,
supported
by the digital revolution and the rise of big data.
Such South-South cooperation –
supported
by German, Norwegian, and Danish technological prowess – can help other developing countries to join the energy Internet.
The Kingdom has
supported
proxies in Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen to contain Iran’s machinations.
We must now move with ambition that matches this historic deal – one
supported
by nearly 200 countries.
Some of these were driven by demand, food production for example, and many of the most revolutionary were
supported
by well-designed government policy, such as the construction of railways and the rapid development of mobile telephony.
But, while China has
supported
the mandatory sanctions set by the United Nations Security Council, it has rejected the West’s unilateral measures.
The last election that was followed by such a sweeping change in policy direction occurred in 1980, when President Ronald Reagan overhauled taxes, spending, and regulation, and
supported
the Federal Reserve’s course of disinflation.
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