Tangible
in sentence
289 examples of Tangible in a sentence
Several more narrowly economic issues – for example, defective growth patterns, underinvestment in
tangible
and intangible assets, and the absence of reforms designed to increase structural flexibility – remain a cause for concern, because they underpin subpar growth.
I estimated the impact on GDP of America’s recent and projected debt increase (in which the explosive growth of public spending on pensions and health care looms largest), using four alternative estimates of the effect of debt on growth: a smaller Reinhart/Rogoff estimate from a more recent paper; a widely used International Monetary Fund study, which finds a larger impact (and which deals with the potential reverse-causality problem); a related CBO study; and a simple production function with government debt crowding out
tangible
capital.
This means combining ideals with
tangible
proposals for Europe’s development.
That response may be surprising, given the
tangible
consequences of the annexation – in particular, the economic impact of Western sanctions, the effects of which have been compounded by plummeting oil prices since June 2014.
What this new study now shows, however, is the
tangible
impact this has on people’s lives.
Clearly, the false trappings of a state provided as part of the Oslo peace process have resulted in little
tangible
change for Palestinians.
An increase in the price of a
tangible
good would typically cause demand to fall, leading the market toward a new equilibrium.
Should Congress not ratify the new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with Russia, Obama’s most
tangible
foreign-policy achievement so far, the entire inspection system for nuclear arms might collapse.
Despite rising inequality, the benefits of globalization have been more
tangible
in developing countries.
It takes time for the full impact of deleveraging, structural rebalancing, and restoring shortfalls in
tangible
and intangible assets via investment to manifest itself.
Protests, or civil resistance, in the face of government force, rarely have immediate,
tangible
results.
Outsiders have found
tangible
improvements in residents’ health.
An indefinite building freeze would lead to the immediate end of Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s coalition government in Jerusalem, without giving Israel or Netanyahu anything
tangible
in return.
Though the security implications of the digital age are less
tangible
and not as destructive as a nuclear attack, the technological possibilities fundamentally alter the playing field of international relations.
Nothing
tangible
was causing the depression; the problem, in March 1933, was in people’s minds.
Surely, they think, economic weakness must be due to something more
tangible
than a feedback loop.
Although development policies will continue to focus on
tangible
outcomes – such as more hospitals, more children in school, and better sanitation – human development must not be reduced only to that which is quantifiable.
However, something much less tangible, but a good deal more valuable in the twenty-first century, may be more important than any of them: India’s “soft power.”
Still, he can be credited for some
tangible
results in bringing Chechnya a modicum of normality.
For this reason, the Egyptian-Iranian rapprochement will yield more photo opportunities than
tangible
results.
So, if we account for this value-chain composition, the decline in manufacturing – the production of
tangible
goods – is even more pronounced.
As part of the campaign, I will be meeting with leaders throughout Africa to encourage them to take
tangible
steps toward strengthening primary care.
And when the president does go overseas, the US press often demands that he bring back
tangible
bounty, in the form of export deals, or assurances on some other immediate “deliverable” – in short, enough transactions to justify the expense.
By November, after all, it will be more than a year since the global crisis began in the US, and Obama and his team must show
tangible
prospects for recovery.
Yet the
tangible
and intangible benefits of adopting new forms of collaboration – reducing the cost of failure, leveraging unused IP and external funding mechanisms, increasing access to networks of talent, and establishing greater trust among patients and other stakeholders – could be extensive.
And tentative evidence suggests that they are delivering some initial
tangible
benefits to the euro area’s economy.
But the ultimate failure of Abbas’s diplomatic strategy – the absence of
tangible
benefits even if it succeeds – will damage what is left of his credibility among the Palestinians and strengthen Hamas’s political clout.
When the new currency was introduced in 1999 – and even more so when European citizens had their first opportunity to use it in January 2002 – it was experienced as the most tangible, decisive proof that European integration was a reality.
The predicted shift of the Parliament to the left - not of tectonic, but still of
tangible
proportions - has happened.
Europe’s most powerful lever in promoting stable, viable, and successful democracies has always been its use of conditionality, linking reforms to clear and
tangible
benefits.
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