Worried
in sentence
1047 examples of Worried in a sentence
In the late 1970s, as neoliberalism took hold, policymakers became less concerned about big firms converting profits into political influence, and instead
worried
that governments were protecting uncompetitive companies.
But even if he did, we should all be
worried
about the “more open and connected” world that he has in mind.
Bank runs occur when people,
worried
that their deposits will not be honored, hastily withdraw their money, thereby creating the very bankruptcy that they feared.
Turkey is also much less
worried
about its future than Israel is.
Instead, Burns, understandably
worried
that fighting inflation would bring a deep recession, decided to kick the can down the road.
At the same time, it is the only Muslim country that, while no less
worried
than Israel about Iran’s nuclear ambitions, can maintain excellent economic and political relations with Iran, regardless of American displeasure.
Investors were not
worried
about default risk on Spanish or Irish sovereign debt, or about Italy’s chronically large sovereign debt.
But if its leaders are
worried
about the impact on its reputation of embracing unconventional policy, they should pause and reflect on the much greater damage that would follow from allowing the economy to slip into a deflationary trap from which it would be difficult, if not impossible, to escape.
Can Anything Slow the Dollar’s Fall?“Dollar denial,” that state of willful blindness in which bankers and central bankers claim not to be
worried
about America’s falling currency, seems to be ending.
While the people inside have often
worried
that newcomers would take away their jobs and subsidies, they usually acquiesced in the end.
How
worried
should businesses, investors, and policymakers around the world be about the end of near-zero interest rates and the start of the first monetary-tightening cycle since 2004-2008?
We are not
worried
by visible dangers, but by vague ones that could strike when least expected – and against which we are insufficiently protected.
In O’Reilly’s case, Fox News acted only after sponsors,
worried
about their own reputations, pulled their advertisements from his show, The O’Reilly Factor.
It’s not surprising, therefore, that many people are
worried
about the fate of those whose jobs are vulnerable – or have already been lost – to the latest disruptive technology.
Overall, according to the Germany Marshall Fund, 62% of Europeans are not
worried
about legal migration.
In this context, the French are understandably
worried
about the fate of their soldiers – soldiers charged with supporting the Lebanese government in its efforts to establish control over the Hezbollah-controlled south.
Should students really be
worried
about commoditization?
In an important sense, their research confirms that my students are right to be
worried.
Those who are rightly
worried
about the politics of fear like to assume that populism is a threat to democracy itself.
At the start of the eurozone crisis in 2010, the EU, too,
worried
about its diversity, and how to reconcile differences between north and south, or center and periphery.
The German government is also
worried
by the Commission's resolution to question the "Volkswagen law."
It is Iran, not India, that we should all be
worried
about.
Wartime inflation destroyed stability in the Russian empire in 1917, as farmers,
worried
about the declining value of their money, hoarded their output and let the cities starve.
At Davos, those who trusted the US not to inflate away its debt intentionally
worried
that it might happen unintentionally.
In short, the US has moved to bring together all of the economies in the region that are
worried
about China’s beggar-thy-neighbor trade and exchange-rate policies.
If so, perhaps we should be far more
worried
about the ethical and social implications of material growth that is faster than humans can spiritually absorb.
Of course, tapping the potential of refugees requires assimilating them to European societies and economies – a challenge that has many Europeans justifiably
worried.
But it is clear that central bankers are nervous about moving rapidly, and are
worried
about the potential impact of policy tightening on financial markets.
These interest-rate movements imply that bond investors are less
worried
today about inflation and economic overheating than they were before Trump’s tax cuts, protectionist measures, and the shift from budget consolidation to aggressive fiscal expansion.
The story was always that speculation in the markets had government leaders worried, which is, of course, essentially the same story that we heard from China on February 27.
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