Upshot
in sentence
67 examples of Upshot in a sentence
The political
upshot
of this pattern has been a significant regression toward nationalism, of the left and the right, in all EMU countries, including Germany.
The
upshot
was that I learned all that went on behind the scenes.
But he is far from alone in his frustration: the
upshot
of the gulf between legal principles and reality is that no member state is satisfied with the current system.
The
upshot
is that conventions to measure how indebted or how liquid a country is can be quite arbitrary.
The
upshot
of this logic is that ecosystem services will no longer be provided for free.
After spending years attempting to insulate the US economy from the
upshot
of its own banking crisis, the Fed may ultimately be forced to bail out China’s banks, too.
The
upshot
is that, regardless of what type of Brexit the UK wants, any orderly withdrawal will require continued post-Brexit budget payments to the EU.
The
upshot
is that the eurozone as a whole is likely to struggle with a zombie banking system, with only patchy efforts to restructure banks decisively and fairly.
The upshot, however, is that central banks end up answering to financial markets, rather than to governments that are accountable to the public.
But one often overlooked
upshot
of the recent, failed EU summit in Amsterdam casts doubt over the prospects for EU enlargement into Eastern Europe.
The
upshot
of this assessment was the belief that economic and political elites – enabled by the European Union – would always act to maintain their position and impose their will on ordinary people.
The
upshot
is that pharmaceutical companies would effectively be allowed to extend – sometimes almost indefinitely – their monopolies on patented medicines, keep cheaper generics off the market, and block “biosimilar” competitors from introducing new medicines for years.
The
upshot
is that the pandemic will further increase China’s relative weight in the global economy.
The
upshot
is that climate change cannot be addressed by simply reducing economic activity; overhauling existing production systems will be absolutely necessary.
And yet, in some ways, it is the natural
upshot
of Netanyahu’s nearly 15 years of systematically subverting Israel’s democracy.
While there remains some scope for improving that deal to make it more prescriptive, the
upshot
is that it already offers a sound basis for concluding a close UK-EU association agreement in the future.
The
upshot
is that as long as the institutions of rule-based democracy can be maintained (especially in the case of a free, independent press), populist governments will be transitory.
The
upshot
is that the ECB will continue to be the economic institution of last resort.
The most consequential political
upshot
of the COVID-19 outbreak may well be the erosion of support for the CPC among China’s urban middle class.
The
upshot
is that many emerging markets will soon experience deep recessions and massive job losses, which risk pushing tens of millions of people back into poverty.
The
upshot
is that a political break has become inevitable.
The
upshot
is that UK-EU economic relations will remain almost unchanged for a long period, whatever happens in this month’s election.
The
upshot
is that taxpayers in creditor countries will once again end up bailing out excessive risk taking and imprudent lending by private actors.
The upshot, then, is that Russia has not only failed to modernize as it should; it has also enmeshed itself in regional conflicts that have precipitated a crisis with the powers upon which its own development depends.
The
upshot
is that in the real world, apparent trade-offs are not always absolute; rather, they are negotiable, or even illusory.
While a shift away from manufacturing is a natural
upshot
of economic development, it began in Latin America at much lower income levels than in the developed countries, making it far more difficult for the region to escape the “middle-income trap.”
Whether the
upshot
is cascading defaults or a flurry of bailouts that shift the burden to the government, the result would weaken the country’s finances and sap investor confidence.
The
upshot
is that the EU finds itself caught between the US and China.
He knew that after the Montsou troubles there had been great excitement in the Paris journals, quite a violent controversy between the official newspapers and the opposition newspapers, terrible narratives, which were especially directed against the International, of which the empire was becoming afraid after having first encouraged it; and the directors not daring to turn a deaf ear any longer, two of them had condescended to come and hold an inquiry, but with an air of regret, not appearing to care about the upshot; so disinterested, that in three days they went away again, declaring that everything was going on as well as possible.
There I found Conseil, who wanted to know the
upshot
of my interview with the captain.
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