Unregulated
in sentence
129 examples of Unregulated in a sentence
If you let that go unregulated, you'll continue to make and break chemical bonds, forming an even more diverse mixture of molecules that then forms this kind of black tarry stuff in your pan, right, that's difficult to wash out.
These live in a global space which is largely unregulated, not subject to the rule of law, and in which people may act free of constraint.
Such
unregulated
products could ultimately add up to a virtual utility that bypasses your electric company just as your cellphone bypassed your wireline phone company.
1.8 billion people around the world work in the economy that is
unregulated
and informal.
This is an amazingly
unregulated
field.
But since today is Tuesday, let me just say that legally regulating and taxing most of the drugs that are now criminalized would radically reduce the crime, violence, corruption and black markets, and the problems of adulterated and
unregulated
drugs, and improve public safety, and allow taxpayer resources to be developed to more useful purposes.
So an
unregulated
1.2 billion dollar industry that thrives as much on the street as it does online, and has spawned fundamental financial services for sneakers?
Police departments can currently look at these networks unregulated, using algorithms that have not been audited for accuracy.
Everyone in their right mind wants to prevent the largest banks from getting out of control, shifting risk into shadowy,
unregulated
activities (on or off their balance sheet), and fleecing consumers.
But when bad things happen and there is pressure on financial markets, with fear of insolvency in the air, it matters a great deal if you have a claim on an insured bank in the United States or on an essentially
unregulated
offshore subsidiary.
On the other hand, Tolstoy justified the unrestrained and
unregulated
eruption of public anger and the furious slaying of retreating French soldiers by Russian peasants.
Unregulated
markets in competition context constitute the otherwise ‘legitimate’ vehicle for both financial and social extortion.”
While much of the West is bound together by institutions like the Organization for Security Cooperation in Europe and NATO, East Asia’s main body, the ASEAN Regional Forum, is too weak to play an analogous role, leaving the region beset with
unregulated
rivalries.
One problem is that the public’s appetite for a bailout of the
unregulated
and hemorrhaging “shadow” financial system, consisting of institutions like hedge funds and private equity firms, is rightly small, yet it too can serve to hold back bank lending if a large proportion of the distressed assets are held in weak institutions there.
Perhaps, therefore, a mix of the two approaches can work best, with the authorities buying illiquid assets, which can help even
unregulated
entities, even while cleaning up the regulated financial sector, focusing particularly on entities that are likely to become distressed.
It is likely to take the form of an opaque global credit glut, turbocharged by the fragile mixture of too-big-to-fail global banking with a huge and largely unwatched and
unregulated
shadow banking sector.
The second question concerns China, which has not hesitated to exploit legal grey areas
unregulated
by the WTO to advance its economic and geopolitical interests.
But what this really amounts to is taking on more risk, typically in an unregulated, unsupervised way – and with very little effective governance within the banks themselves (again, Admati explains why bank executives like it this way).
Unfortunately, however, the industry is plagued by illegal, unreported, and
unregulated
fishing, which undermines conservation efforts and handicaps honest fishers and businesses that follow the rules.
A recent study found that 20-32% of seafood imported into the United States was likely from illegal, unreported, and
unregulated
sources.
Illegal, unreported, and
unregulated
fishing is a problem that can be solved through leadership, action, and international cooperation.
As he argued,
unregulated
capitalism can lead to regular bouts of over-capacity, under-consumption, and the recurrence of destructive financial crises, fueled by credit bubbles and asset-price booms and busts.
That means moving away from both the Anglo-Saxon model of
unregulated
markets and the continental European model of deficit-driven welfare states.
But, unlike libertarians, centrists do not think markets can cure all ills; on the contrary, in some cases (finance is the most obvious example),
unregulated
markets can be a source of instability.
Illegal, unreported, and
unregulated
economic activities are common.
On the other hand,
unregulated
markets fail to achieve two central goals of any civilized society: “The outstanding faults of the economic society in which we live are its failure to provide for full employment and its arbitrary and inequitable distribution of wealth and incomes.”
But the weaknesses of the current governance regime, epitomized by rampant illegal, unregulated, and unreported fishing, threaten to undermine the global security and sustainability to which well managed oceans can contribute.
It is surprising how readily politicians of all parties – even strong ideological defenders of the
unregulated
market – accepted the idea that the state should bail out banks and insurance companies when they got into trouble.
Countries like Poland, where
unregulated
small businesses are generating nearly all the new jobs and growth, worry about the costs of Brussels regulations.
Many families feel insecure about the availability and cost of
unregulated
private insurance.
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