Worried
in sentence
1047 examples of Worried in a sentence
To take another example, the East
worried
about a “brain drain” of professionals to the West, where opportunities seemed to be more plentiful.
Few in Argentina, which is enjoying a consumer boom, are
worried
about inflation.
In fact, euro-zone leaders should be less
worried
about variations in internal growth than about clear evidence of overall economic underperformance.
To be sure, there are still many reasons to be
worried.
This is why I am less
worried
than others about frequently cited risks confronting the Chinese economy.
Nor he is overly
worried
about the domestic scene, since opponents are deeply divided and thus unable to offer an electoral alternative.
Worried
about worsening inflation and a budding real-estate bubble, the People’s Bank of China (PBC, the central bank) gradually tightened its monetary stance.
Many in the region are now
worried
that they will reap little from this fleeting period of industrialization, and that current demographic, social, and economic trends could lead to security and humanitarian crises in the future.
So here are ten good reasons to believe in Europe – ten rational arguments to convince pessimistic analysts, and
worried
investors alike, that it is highly premature to bury the euro and the EU altogether.
Newly rich consumers in rural areas increasingly put their savings into gold, a familiar store of value, while wealthy urban consumers,
worried
about inflation, also turned to buying gold.
It was the summer of 2000 when I began asking Republicans I know – generally people who might be natural candidates for various sub-cabinet policy positions in a Republican administration – how
worried
they were that the Republican presidential candidate, George W. Bush, was clearly not up to the job.
They were not worried, they told me, that Bush was inadequately briefed and strangely incurious for a man who sought the most powerful office in the world.
A second reason is that, while emerging-economy members dislike the US monopoly, they are even more
worried
about the prospect of a president from a rival emerging economy.
Recent opinion polls suggest that at least half of all South Koreans are
worried
enough about regional tensions to support closer military ties with Japan.
Many international observers have been
worried
about the country’s oversupply of housing and the related credit boom, making me wonder whether I have been overly sanguine about these risks.
Liberals have not
worried
about ethnic demographics, because they assume that individuals eventually identify with the host society’s norms.
Some traditional leaders, academics, representatives of civil-society groups, and students, on the other hand, were more
worried
about whether the country’s new oil wealth would benefit ordinary people.
Perhaps
worried
that Bo’s defiant behavior was winning the public-relations battle, the official media also launched a media blitz savaging Bo’s character and all but pronouncing him guilty.
So, should the French be
worried?
People are
worried
about their futures, with a record number now fearing that their children may end up worse off than them.
In case you are
worried
that the Bond-Tatiana affair would spark too many off-color remarks from the collective eminences, the presence of German Chancellor Angela Merkel should keep things under control.
But for the time being, neither Santa Claus, nor anyone else, has reason to be
worried.
Nevertheless, financial investors are increasingly
worried
that inflation will eventually begin to rise, owing to the large expansion of commercial bank reserves engineered by the United States Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank (ECB).
On the other side were officials, like George Harrison of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, who
worried
about the impact on the broader economy and preferred to use other instruments to address financial imbalances.
The demand that the ECB should be the central supervisory authority in an integrated capital market met strong resistance, above all from Germany’s Bundesbank, which
worried
that a role in maintaining financial stability might undermine the Bank’s ability to focus on price stability as the primary goal of monetary policy.
As a result, investors are
worried
that China could slip into the excess-leverage growth model that has served many developed economies so poorly.
Europeans are more
worried
about the future than they were a decade ago, not least because they are not convinced that their political leaders can respond effectively to current challenges.
Investors were
worried
that the downgrade could cause global turbulence and began to pull their money out of emerging markets.
Today, some policymakers in Latin America,
worried
that the same thing could happen to their countries, are casting about for policy tools to prevent it.
Should the world be
worried
by this decline in cross-border capital flows and slowdown in financing?
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