Wake
in sentence
1205 examples of Wake in a sentence
In the
wake
of the crisis that began in 2007, policy rates were reduced to unprecedented levels, where they remain today, and measures were taken to slash longer-term rates as well.
Unless governments
wake
up to this blinding reality, they are going to have to deal with far more than a few extremists.”
Indeed, Istiqlal, a secular center-right party, left the government in the
wake
of the Egyptian coup, accusing the JDP, under Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkirane, of trying to “Egyptianize” Morocco by monopolizing power, as Morsi did in Egypt.
In the
wake
of Russia’s annexation of Crimea, for example, Harper was the only G-7 leader to visit Kyiv, where he drew stark – if questionable – historical parallels between Russia’s actions and Germany’s annexation of the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia in 1938.
Treatment, too, has changed in the
wake
of the mass poisoning.
The French rejected the European Union constitution, primarily – or so it appears – because further European integration, it is feared, must bring in its
wake
the huge costs and disruptions of neo-liberalism.
In 2000, in the
wake
of the crisis, they created the Chiang Mai Initiative, a regional network of financial credits and swaps.
Will the Kremlin finally
wake
up to this?Thirty-six years ago, Richard Nixon and Mao Zedong turned world politics upside down, as both America and China realized that it was the Soviet Union, and not each other, that posed the greater threat.
Given economic insecurity within China in the
wake
of the financial crisis and global recession, China’s government finds insecurity in neighbouring territories more threatening than ever.
In the
wake
of the Brexit vote, swift action by the Bank of England helped to calm financial markets and keep credit flowing.
The British, meanwhile, have always been classic reluctant member - always late, always unwillingly dragged along in the
wake
of the front-runners, but seldom offering alternative proposals.
In the
wake
of WWII, the US, motivated partly by the Cold War, helped to create the old order by facilitating economic recovery in the West and, over time, creating growth opportunities for developing countries.
From the point of view of public policy, three points can already be made in its
wake.
Should he
wake
up one morning and decide to impose heavy import tariffs on European cars, things could get very ugly, very fast.
Given long-term constraints on both fiscal and household spending in the
wake
of the financial crisis and downward pressure on asset prices, the sustainability of such an employment trend is questionable.
In the
wake
of the Arab Spring, and amid growing unrest among Syrians seeking an end to the brutal Assad regime, the US and France sent their ambassadors to visit Hama in July 2011 to urge unity among the fledgling opposition movement.
Thanks to pressure on garment manufacturers in the
wake
of the Rana Plaza disaster, the industry’s minimum wage was increased 77%, to $68 a month.
In the
wake
of the global credit crisis, the answer to the first question is not in doubt.
In the
wake
of this failed experiment, even Harrison was forced to acknowledge that reining in the market required policymakers to make lending more expensive for the financial sector as a whole.
The euro, according to this view, was devised in a fit of giddy and irresponsible optimism – or, alternatively, panic at the prospect of German hegemony over Europe – in the
wake
of the fall of the Berlin Wall.
But his credibility was sapped in the
wake
of criticism of the BoE’s handling of the collapse in 1991 of the Bank of Credit and Commerce International – an episode that anticipated later issues in managing the failure of large, cross-border institutions.
In the
wake
of the riots, British Prime Minister David Cameron has proposed reviving children’s courts, urged harsh sentences and orange jumpsuits for convicts, and floated even more odious ideas.
A massive gap between the elites and everyone else ensured that the top echelons of literature, business, and politics were managed by the wealthy few, and that the talents that would emerge a generation later, in the
wake
of wider state-funded education, were suppressed.
After all, a new division of wealth could occur only in the
wake
of a revolution that would disturb his hold on power.
He somehow lulled Italians into believing that all was well in their economy and society, even in the
wake
of the 2008 global economic crisis, when plainly it was not.
Such measures as the efforts by the European Parliament to regulate the derivatives market or the British government’s ban on short selling in the
wake
of the financial crisis or the demand to caps bankers’ bonuses are contemporary expressions of the wish to reduce the power of financial speculation to damage the economy.
We assembled in the
wake
of a declaration in July by the United Nations General Assembly calling on countries to examine how national policies can promote happiness in their societies.
In the
wake
of the Iraq war and the assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafic Hariri, Turkey provided diplomatic cover to the besieged Baath regime.
With two business advisory councils having been disbanded in the
wake
of the Charlottesville incident, following an exodus of CEOs critical of Trump’s response, plans for an infrastructure advisory council have now also been dropped.
With the LAC coming into being in the
wake
of China’s victory in 1962, the situation is even more unclear.
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