Unconventional
in sentence
476 examples of Unconventional in a sentence
Instead, the PBOC is employing
unconventional
regulatory tools – such as short-term liquidity operations, standing lending facilities, and reverse repurchase agreements – to boost the money supply, driving the repurchase rate to a ten-year low.
It also highlights how China is fashioning
unconventional
tools of coercive diplomacy, whose instruments already range from informally boycotting goods from a targeted country to halting strategic exports (such as of rare-earth minerals) and suspending Chinese tourist travel.
Notwithstanding the Fed’s claims that its
unconventional
policies have been the elixir of economic renewal in the US, the healing process still has years to go.
The Federal Reserve’s
unconventional
monetary policy has driven down the cost of the net interest on the federal debt to just 1.4% of GDP, despite the increase in the volume of the debt.
Soon after the crisis erupted, the G-20 countries embraced massive stimulus packages,
unconventional
monetary policies in the advanced economies, and major institutional efforts, such as the Dodd-Frank financial-reform legislation in the United States and the Basel III initiative to strengthen banking standards.
Other perceived threats to Indian culture include offensive language, gay themes, and
unconventional
views, especially on socially and politically sensitive topics.
The possibility for more
unconventional
monetary policies will be limited by bloated balance sheets and the lack of headroom to cut policy rates.
This requires a weak currency and conventional and
unconventional
monetary policies to bring about the required depreciation.
The more its
unconventional
initiatives to repair the euro are contested, the more orthodox the ECB will be in its conduct of monetary policy.
Unconventional
monetary policies have created a massive overhang of liquidity.
The United Nations Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights has recommended that Argentina’s government “reconsider” the exploitation of
unconventional
hydrocarbons.
In fact, those wishing to exploit shale deposits are receiving shiny new subsidies of their own, along with other benefits: a guaranteed price through Plan Gas for
unconventional
gas, reduced regional government fees per unit of gas extracted, and an agreement with the main trade unions that lowers workforce costs.
The current approach, centered on
unconventional
monetary policy, is not the answer.
The European Central Bank and the central banks of Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, and a few Central European countries are likely to embrace quantitative easing or use other
unconventional
policies to prevent their currencies from appreciating.
But the overall policy mix has been sub-optimal, with too much front-loaded fiscal consolidation and too much
unconventional
monetary policy (which has become less effective over time).
In a world where private aggregate demand is weak and
unconventional
monetary policy eventually becomes like pushing on a string, the case for slower fiscal consolidation and productive public infrastructure spending is compelling.
As in the oil and gas sector – where tapping
unconventional
sources, such as shale and tar sands, has proved a game changer – the water sector must adopt all
unconventional
options, including recycling wastewater and desalinating ocean and brackish waters.
The stock market’s recent performance often is attributed to the
unconventional
monetary policies that many central banks have been pursuing.
As a result,
unconventional
– and untested – policies, such as so-called “quantitative easing,” have become the rage among central bankers.
All along, such
unconventional
policies were viewed as a temporary fix.
In a post-crisis environment of aggressive and
unconventional
monetary policy in other advanced countries, the ECB’s less aggressive policies (owing to its more restrictive mandate) have resulted in an exchange rate that has damaged competitiveness and the growth potential of many eurozone economies’ tradable sectors.
Furthermore, the PBC uses
unconventional
instruments from time to time, such as “credit ceilings” or “credit quotas” imposed on commercial banks.
The only way to address this challenge is by radically rethinking water-resource planning and management in a way that emphasizes the creative exploitation of
unconventional
water sources.
There is a large and growing number of
unconventional
sources of fresh water with massive potential, beginning with desalinated seawater or highly brackish groundwater.
Yet another
unconventional
source of freshwater is used greywater and wastewater from urban areas.
Despite the demonstrated promise of
unconventional
water sources, not to mention the urgency of the water challenge in many countries, the potential of these solutions remains woefully underexplored.
To this end, governments must abandon their outdated assumption that tapping
unconventional
water sources would be technically impractical or excessively costly.
The private sector also has a role to play in the shift toward
unconventional
water resources – a role that must extend beyond current efforts to tap desalinated water and urban greywater and wastewater.
Finally, local institutions, nongovernmental organizations, and local communities must be mobilized – for example, through public campaigns showcasing the benefits of harnessing the potential of
unconventional
water resources.
If governments do not embrace
unconventional
water resources, achieving that goal will be as difficult as getting water from a stone – and the consequences for water-scarce regions will be dire.
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