Tackle
in sentence
775 examples of Tackle in a sentence
For example, if we fail to
tackle
climate change, the worst effects will be suffered by future generations and by poor countries far from global power centers.”
We intend to take a two-pronged approach: significantly increase our local-currency lending and explore new avenues within the framework of the Vienna Initiative to
tackle
the crisis and prevent its recurrence.
Any significant move to
tackle
the PDP machine will likely need to come from the Senate and its president, Ken Nnamani, who played a key role in thwarting Obasanjo’s quest for a third term.
But the EU has created a political society in Europe such as has never existed before: a continuous process among Europe’s nations that enables adaptation of policies and institutions to
tackle
problems as they arise – and to
tackle
them together.
What they can do is
tackle
another fundamental problem: low voter turnout.
We must
tackle
the problem at its sources, by rebuilding failed states and giving their populations a reason to stay at home.
Aznar’s current plans are too timid: they
tackle
only public health expenditures, not the underlying welfare state structure.
Our approach provides policymakers in developing countries with a framework to
tackle
the daunting coordination challenges inherent in the creation of new, competitive industries.
A successful Doha Round would thus complement the international collaborative efforts underway, with IMF involvement, to
tackle
external imbalances among the major economies.
And, in the longer term, we would have a viable international model of how to
tackle
severe sovereign-debt problems.
So, too, in Asia, where President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping just announced ambitious commitments to
tackle
climate change, we are reminded of what countries can accomplish together with real leadership – and of how much additional leadership is required to conclude a successful climate agreement in Paris next year.
But as the Commonwealth moves to
tackle
new challenges in human development, its leadership is failing to place sufficient emphasis on the most important factor of all: education.
Obama administration officials had been hoping that bilateral cooperation to
tackle
this common threat might deepen the US-China partnership in the same way that the common Soviet threat brought Nixon and Mao together in 1972.
That leaves China’s government with little choice other than to turn to internal demand and
tackle
the Four Uns head on.
The treaties mark an attempt to balance action and ambition in a context of economic crisis, fiscal consolidation, large-scale defense transformations, increasing interdependencies, and global threats – from terrorism and nuclear proliferation to climate change, resource scarcity, and epidemics – that are impossible to
tackle
unilaterally.
To be sure, some Asian governments have been attempting to
tackle
inequality with progressive redistribution policies.
That leaves political change at the mercy of a system-threatening crisis, brought on by China’s failure to
tackle
the pathologies the World Bank has so ably diagnosed.
Bold initiatives to
tackle
inequality are crucial.
That is why it is so important that national leaders prove, right now, that they can and will
tackle
inequality and the plight of those who feel left behind by globalization.
In the next half-year or so, Nato must
tackle
the thorniest question: whom to admit, and when.
Many of the agitators’ bugbears are indeed worthy of criticism: the European Union’s opacity, the duplicitousness and greed of Wall Street bankers, the reluctance to
tackle
problems caused by mass immigration, the lack of concern for those hurt by economic globalization.
But, while we need to
tackle
climate change, it is also worth remembering our priorities.
At its launch, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim claimed, “We will never end poverty if we don't
tackle
climate change.”
Yes, we need to
tackle
climate change – and
tackle
it smartly.
To
tackle
the problem, the Chinese government must, in the words of Premier Li Keqiang, “ruthlessly bring down the knife [on] zombie enterprises.”
European leaders, frankly, should know better than to blame EU institutions, hypothetical trade deals, and refugees for their own failures to
tackle
unemployment and reduce inequality.
The imperative to
tackle
malnutrition could not be clearer.
Niger’s government halved the number of deaths of children under the age of five over a similar period, by making specific budget and operational decisions to
tackle
severe wasting.
This fact alone is not a reason to pick a candidate; but in Ghebreyesus’s case, his direct experience working in developing countries makes him uniquely qualified to
tackle
our toughest global health problems, which tend to hit developing countries the hardest.
Unlike our forebears, who did very little or nothing about urban heat islands, we are in a good position to
tackle
many of their effects.
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