Window
in sentence
1990 examples of Window in a sentence
Currently, India has a
window
of opportunity, nearly unique in nature, thanks to a huge demographic dividend: almost 60% of the country’s population is below the age of 30.
According to the Reinharts’ paper, when compared to the decade that precedes financial crises like the one that started three years ago, “GDP growth and housing prices are significantly lower and unemployment higher” in the subsequent “ten-year window.”
Austerity Is Not Greece’s ProblemCAMBRIDGE – When looking out a window, it is easy to be fooled by your own reflection and see more of yourself than the outside world.
Instead, Bush should plan on a two-year
window
to give the Iraqi government as strong a chance as possible before the Americans leave, while emphasizing that Iraqis will thereafter be responsible for their own security and political salvation.
In the urban neighborhoods to which the young and hip are moving, city garden plots and heirloom tomatoes grown in
window
boxes have replaced Lexuses and Priuses.
It can, for example, restore through a side
window
the fiscal laxness which the Treaty of Amsterdam evicted by the front door.
That system ended on August 15, 1971 when President Nixon, as part of a package of economic changes including wage and price ceilings, "closed the gold window," ie, he ended the commitment that the US had undertaken at Bretton Woods to buy and sell gold at $35 an ounce.
The king has a
window
of opportunity to deliver on his promises.
As a Chinese official once explained to me, the strategy is to open the
window
but place a screen on it.
Bird extinctions are our best
window
onto humanity’s massive and irreversible environmental impact.
This
window
of opportunity can be expanded through dialogue and reconciliation with those who are ready to disavow extremism and militancy.
Political leaders in the P-6 have run out of domestic-policy options, but they have a
window
of opportunity to change the external environment.
The Sarkozy OptionPARIS – From the Caucasus in August 2008 to the Middle East in January 2009, is France under President Nicolas Sarkozy attempting to incarnate what might be called “the West by default,” making maximum use of the
window
of opportunity opened by America’s presidential transition?
Beyond its impact on the Middle East, Sarkozy’s failed but brave attempt to act as a go-between constitutes an interesting
window
into the foreign-policy methods and ambitions of today’s France.
Lurching along a rutted track that doubles as a major urban avenue, Kenyans are all too aware that a pothole is not simply a pothole; it is a
window
into the deeper crises that Kenya, like much of Africa, has put off repairing for far too long.
And, in important respects, the repeal of Glass-Steagall actually enabled the resolution of the crisis, by permitting the merger of Bear and JPMorgan Chase and by allowing the US Federal Reserve to open its discount
window
for Morgan Stanley and Goldman when they otherwise could have been sources of systemic risk.
As seen earlier in Asia, the slowdown in rural population growth and the reduced burden of childcare creates a
window
of opportunity for new investment to bring larger year-on-year increases in output per capita.
Except in extreme cases, confidence cannot cause a bad policy to have good results, and a lack of it cannot cause a good policy to have bad results, any more than jumping out of a
window
in the mistaken belief that humans can fly can offset the effect of gravity.
Most ominously, the
window
of opportunity for a two-state solution could close for good, because realities on the ground will no longer allow it.
And with populist movements across Europe pummeling traditional parties in the polls, the
window
for delivering real change is quickly closing.
But the
window
of opportunity will not stay open forever.
A country should not be making fundamental, irreversible changes based on a razor-thin minority that might prevail only during a brief
window
of emotion.
With the next Nuclear Security Summit to take place in the United States in 2016, a
window
of opportunity will be opened by next year’s NPT Review Conference, which will allow the world to address the issue of nuclear security in a long-term, inclusive manner.
On the contrary, it is a significant
window
into the arena in which the conflict over the future of Iran's nuclear program is being waged.
The so-called “autonomous” violent left-wing radicals in Berlin-Kreuzberg enjoy themselves by torching luxury cars, but not a single bank
window
has been smashed in Germany.
Later that year, however, the government of Saad Hariri, Rafik Hariri’s son, brought new hope, prompting the IMF to declare that it had “opened a new
window
of opportunity for invigorating economic reforms.”
But it is now starting to look like that
window
has already closed.
During the mid-2000’s, there was a brief
window
when some argued that currencies had become more stable as a corollary of the “Great Moderation” in macroeconomic activity.
The Kurds in the north cleverly and adeptly used the
window
of opportunity that opened before them to seize de facto independence, though the key question of control over the northern city of Kirkuk remains a ticking time bomb.
By cleaning up our carbon footprint now, future generations of air travelers from all countries will be able to look out their
window
onto a healthy planet.
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