Warned
in sentence
965 examples of Warned in a sentence
Pessimists have long viewed the Chinese economy as they view their own economies – repeating a classic mistake that Yale historian Jonathan Spence’s seminal assessment
warned
of many years ago.
Larry Summers, who was then Deputy Secretary of the United States Treasury, repeatedly
warned
the Japanese government that if it proceeded with a scheduled consumption-tax hike, Japan’s economy would slide back into recession.
Many in Brazil, especially central bankers, have
warned
that continued litigation of past monetary policies could result in a breakdown of the current financial system, leading to new levels of economic dysfunction, such as insufficient credit.
And, a few days ago, Jens Weidmann, the president of the Bundesbank, publicly
warned
that the world risks a harmful and ultimately futile round of competitive exchange-rate depreciations – or, more bluntly, a “currency war” (a term used previously by Brazil to express similar concerns).
This assortment of “Austrian” economists, radical monetarists, gold bugs, and Bitcoin fanatics has repeatedly
warned
that such a massive increase in global liquidity would lead to hyperinflation, the US dollar’s collapse, sky-high gold prices, and the eventual demise of fiat currencies at the hands of digital krypto-currency counterparts.
Two competitiveness gurus, Michael Porter and Jan Rivkin of Harvard Business School, recently
warned
that stagnant middle-class incomes undermine US companies in several ways.
In a major speech, he
warned
that there is “pain” ahead, and that it will be felt by everyone, as severe spending cuts will be required to bring down Britain’s massive fiscal deficit.
The Arctic Council has
warned
that more shipping traffic will increase the risk of catastrophic oil spills.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton rightly
warned
the opposition recently that, thus far, they have been unable to unite the minorities behind them precisely because it is unclear to these groups that they will fare better without Assad than with him.
It is time that those who are asked to take part in debriefing are
warned
that the process has the capacity to do harm as well as good.
Clearly, those who have
warned
that China is following in Japan’s footsteps and heading for a long-term deflationary cycle have been far off the mark.
Nearly two years ago, former US National Security Adviser and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
warned
the Senate Armed Services Committee that, “as we look around the world, we encounter upheaval and conflict.”
Yet, in the face of overwhelming evidence of the importance of inflation or deflation risk, most people – even in countries that have been
warned
– generally still have not taken steps to protect themselves.
The US Council of Economic Advisors
warned
of this possibility in 1949, and it was not alone.
Indeed, the UK’s premier security think tank, the Institute for International Strategic Studies, recently
warned
that, while the world focuses on the fight against international terrorism and the unfolding events in the Middle East, China is rapidly expanding its influence from Asia to Africa.
Likewise, if economists had listened to their critics who
warned
about currency manipulation, trade imbalances, and job losses, instead of sticking to models that assumed away such problems, they might have been in a better position to counter excessive claims about the adverse impact of trade deals on employment.
Public employees were informed that the draft constitution was a government project that they had to support, and newspaper and broadcast journalists were
warned
that their licenses could be revoked after a radio station aired an interview with a parliamentarian who opposed Kibaki’s constitution.
Jacques Santer
warned
against “harmonizing every last nut or bolt.”
As one opposition spokesman warned, “America will pay a price for this.
I dislike budget deficits, and I have long
warned
about their dangerous effects.
When Professor Malegapuru Makgoba, South Africa’s leading black immunologist,
warned
that the president’s policies would make South Africa a laughingstock in the world of science, Mbeki’s office accused him of defending racist Western ideas.
Rather than buckling to France’s will, the Romanian president
warned
French leaders to stop lecturing his country.
As for Brazil, many had
warned
before the first round of the presidential election on October 7 that only Lula could defeat Bolsonaro in a run-off.
Iran’s race to develop nuclear weapons, Netanyahu warned, can be understood only in the context of its leaders’ “repeated vows to wipe the Jewish state off the face of the earth.”
He repeatedly
warned
Obama not to get into a “shooting war” in Syria.
As a group of Silicon Valley technologists has warned, “Technology is hijacking our minds and society.”
Indeed, the rules have changed, and Israel cannot say that it was not
warned
that this is an era in which international law and universal justice are being forcefully promoted as pillars of an improved world order.
The United Kingdom’s Home Office has
warned
that hundreds of British and other European Muslims fighting in Syria alongside Al Qaeda-linked rebel groups could return home to carry out terrorist attacks.
The same cannot be said of Trump, who surely has been
warned
of the dangers of hurling insults like “Rocket Man” at the brutal and inexperienced Kim.
As Rudi Dornbusch, the late MIT economics professor, once warned, a crisis takes longer than expected to arrive but moves faster than anticipated when it does.
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