Willingness
in sentence
896 examples of Willingness in a sentence
This
willingness
to subordinate state to God, even among the highly educated, lies at the heart of Pakistan’s crisis.
But today's
willingness
to stabilize the regional economy does not mean that China will pay any price for stability, nor that it will do carries these regional burdens forever.
But it also depends on the ability and
willingness
of government to provide a bridging function for the deficiency in aggregate demand, and to pursue reforms and investments that boost long-term growth prospects.
Indeed, experience gives little reason to presume that a modern way of speaking,
willingness
to liberalize the economy, and an urge for technological development automatically translates into a democratic opening.
Obama has already made it clear that the US understands that Modi’s
willingness
to cooperate with Russia, despite Western sanctions imposed on the country, stems from India’s desire to discourage a Sino-Russian alliance against it.
As a result, it has expressed a
willingness
to cooperate with the US on finding a soft landing for Iraq.
While the situation undoubtedly remains tense and unwieldy, religion’s waning political role may create an opening for progress, much as, say, Saudi Crown Prince Muhammed bin Salman’s
willingness
to discard fundamentalist imperatives favors modernization.
Only by demonstrating professionalism in its work, and
willingness
to hold senior government figures accountable where appropriate, can the ICC engender broad and lasting support.
NATO after UkraineWARSAW – Russia’s aggression in Ukraine has called into question NATO’s
willingness
and ability to protect its East European flank.
Fifth, weak profitability, owing to high debts and default risk, low economic – and thus revenue – growth, and persistent deflationary pressure on companies’ margins, will continue to constrain firms’
willingness
to produce, hire workers, and invest.
They cast any criticism of Saddam as a
willingness
to accept American aggression.
We need a pragmatic
willingness
to adapt incentives and outcomes to achieve distributional results that allow the major players, with their domestic political constraints, to keep the system open.
They underestimated the ties among its members, how much they had collectively invested, and their
willingness
to come together to solve common problems when it mattered most.
Conditionality has plainly failed to deliver the intended results, because, ultimately, its success depends on countries’
willingness
to accept the European agenda.
There must also be a strong political commitment to intervention, and an explicit
willingness
to accept the consequences for domestic monetary conditions, which may involve an inflation rate that is higher or lower than desired, perhaps for some time.
The White House’s handling of the Porter situation reflects the Trump administration’s
willingness
to side with anyone who serves its political agenda – such as Roy Moore, the failed Senate candidate from Alabama, even after credible allegations that Moore had made sexual advances against several women when they were minors.
The addition of €21 billion, in the form of guarantees from the EU budget, is unlikely to have a significant impact on banks’
willingness
to finance investment.
This, however, requires an adequate understanding of those interests and a
willingness
to cooperate on the basis of mutual trust, which should be a given within the European family.
The second is reflected in our
willingness
to spend almost unlimited sums to rescue trapped miners, and our reluctance to pay for higher safety standards that would save more lives at lower cost.
A key to the relative success of Latin America in the 1930s and 1940s was the
willingness
to throw out old orthodoxies and experiment with new policies.
A further study found a similar difference in
willingness
to mail an addressed letter that had been left behind in the phone booth: those who found the coin were more likely to mail the letter.
American prosecutors in the Enron case have made important progress lately, with some important crooks, like Andrew Fastow, offering both guilty pleas and a
willingness
to testify against their former colleagues.
Persistence, pragmatism, and some
willingness
to experiment will help.
But Greece's maverick finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, has taken his case boldly to the media and the public in a way that leaves little doubt as to his
willingness
to play hard ball.
The traditional virtues of “true love” have been replaced by pragmatism and a
willingness
to become a mistress before youth expires and all chances of getting a good apartment are lost.
Recent efforts by President Hamid Karzai’s administration to limit its public accountability demonstrate that the Afghan government in its current form lacks either the capacity or the
willingness
to do so.
Indeed, though China’s government has expressed its
willingness
to sacrifice some growth in its pursuit of structural reform and rebalancing, the impact of a housing-market collapse on the financial sector would cause growth to slow beyond the acceptable limit.
While there have been numerous well-intentioned attempts to improve management of these resources, all rely on individual actors’
willingness
to concede the short-term economic benefits of intensive resource use for the sake of the long-term common good.
Top-down governance approaches have been useful, showing the
willingness
of some of the historical greenhouse-gas emitters to accept remedial responsibility.
But a
willingness
only to negotiate is perceived in Vladimir Putin's Russia as the sign of weakness that it is.
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