Transition
in sentence
2200 examples of Transition in a sentence
One might have expected this transition, which reached its pivotal year in the United States in 2000, to cause unemployment (at least until the economy adjusted), accompanied by a rise in productivity.
That shift, in turn, clears the way for a generational change in leadership – and, more importantly, a
transition
to post-Oslo politics.
All of this adds up to a unique opportunity for the European Union to support its neighbors’
transition
from revolutionary upheaval to democratic government.
That said, as China undergoes structural economic transition, the stabilization potential of macroeconomic policy is limited.
Germany, meanwhile, must address its demographic challenges, in particular by preparing German society for increased immigration, and promote the
transition
to an inclusive growth model based on improved demand and a better balance of saving and investment.
Investors need to know with certainty that Europe is committed to accelerating its
transition
to a low-carbon, knowledge-based economy.
Haiti’s
transition
to effective and sustainable statehood is therefore also vital for establishing a prosperous border regime.
Egypt’s
transition
from populist economic policies to anti-American populism exemplifies the impact that political uncertainty can have on economic developments.
Does it allow for an orderly
transition?
While negotiators hoped for concrete progress towards an international climate agreement, the world’s two largest polluters were distracted – the US with preventing a collapse of the financial system in the midst of a presidential transition, China with a slowdown in domestic investment and weakening foreign demand for its manufactured goods.
But Barroso’s declaration directs discourse relating to the democratic deficit in a specific direction – one that will likely resemble the European Parliament’s
transition
from an appointment-based system to direct election.
Just as Syria comprises a more complex society than the other Arab countries currently in the throes of political transition, so, too, are its external relations more complex.
But the sheer complexity of conditions in Syria means that the regime’s endgame could trigger a
transition
unlike any other in the Arab Spring, different in both its domestic course and in its effects on the region.
So far, the US has handled the various forms of political
transition
in the Arab Spring without severely damaging missteps.
The others evolved into multi-party democracies during the middle-income
transition.
China, too, most likely wants to retain, at least for a while, the benefits of single-party rule, and delay the
transition
to “messier” governance influenced by multiple voices.
Many insiders and external advisers believe that the state’s role must change (not necessarily decline) to create the dynamic innovative economy that is key to navigating the middle-income
transition
successfully.
And there is a comprehensive – and admittedly expensive – social-security system to support people in
transition.
Pinochet’s ability to evade the courts cast a dark shadow over the country’s military institutions and made many Chileans wonder how far the country had really gone in its
transition
to democracy.
The financial industry has a central role to play in catalyzing the global
transition
to inclusive, sustainable growth.
We know that enormous public and private investment is required for the
transition
toward a low-carbon economy, to win the global fight against poverty and disease, and to provide high-quality education and physical infrastructure worldwide.
In Moldova, a real
transition
to democracy has been underway for some time.
Second, much will depend on how China navigates the
transition
to a more open capital account.
Might it be possible for China to establish limits on arbitrary executive power and strengthen creditor rights sufficiently without undertaking a full-fledged
transition
to democracy?
And for good reason: these are the internal engines that have enabled China to achieve 6-7% annual GDP growth amid a difficult structural shift and middle-income transition, carried out in a relatively weak global economy.
The current issue of the intellectual magazine Deadalus not only contains an essay entitled "We live in an age of
transition"
by none other than that icon of the Cold War, Henry Kissinger (does he realize that he has become a caricature of himself?), but actually reprints the minutes of a 1965 conference on global order.
In Egypt, a similar scenario would enhance the prospects of democratic
transition.
What steady-state advocates forget is that stagnating or declining incomes would heighten resistance to higher taxes on fossil fuels and delay investment in green technologies (and thus the
transition
to new industries and the creation of better jobs).
Trump’s
transition
team sent surveys to the US Department of Energy, seeking the names of employees who have worked on climate-change policy.
In the first half of the 1990s, annual inflation averaged 40% in Africa, 230% in Latin America, and 360% in the
transition
economies of Eastern Europe.
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