Worrying
in sentence
569 examples of Worrying in a sentence
As societies become richer, individuals can afford to stop
worrying
about food and sanitation, and to start
worrying
about the environment.
Recessions of the third kind are the most
worrying.
This regulatory architecture would leave the Fed free to speak openly about the development of the financial system as a whole, without
worrying
about the implications for individual institutions in its care.
Instead of focusing on securing a soft landing today, Chinese policymakers should be
worrying
about the brick wall that economic growth may hit in the second half of the quinquennium.
That is a
worrying
trend, and not only for Japan: South Korea can hardly stand alone as the lone Asian democracy.
How much of it will be lost, particularly if a new regime in Baghdad punishes Jordan for its close ties with the Iraqi government, is a
worrying
question.
Worrying
signs are everywhere: the authority of the courts is undermined, the independence of the Constitutional Tribunal is attacked, the civil service corrupted, and prosecutors are politicized.
A deeper, more
worrying
explanation is that Europe does not have a strong desire for growth.
Far more
worrying
is an issue that is yet to play out.
The process is now progressing at a startling - and
worrying
- pace.
Even more
worrying
are the downside risks of powerful new cyber, bio, and nanotechnologies: A few individuals, via error or terror, could ignite a societal breakdown so quickly that government responses would be overwhelmed.
The evidence from Guatemala is particularly
worrying.
Fear of inflation, when viewed in the context of a possible global depression, is like
worrying
about getting the measles when one is in danger of getting the plague.
Indeed, there is a
worrying
aspect to the new plans: they must tread a narrow path between reckless freedom for financial institutions, which contributed to the recent global financial crisis, and over-caution, which can suffocate innovation and create inefficiencies.
Unfortunately, there are
worrying
signs that the global response may be headed in the wrong direction.
For Thant, this strategic competition is
worrying.
Instead of
worrying
that 70 cents per $100 is giving till it hurts, our slogan in the rich countries should be “Giving Till it Heals.”
But more than the draft's omissions are
worrying.
In the preamble, the regulators refer to “a
worrying
degree of variability in banks’ calculations of [risk-weighted assets].”
Some of its members have displayed
worrying
populist tendencies, but an analysis of parliamentary voting patterns indicates that so far the coalition has been able to find agreement, even on very difficult issues.
But while older voters have fueled resurgent British and American nationalism, Le Pen owes much of her support to younger cohorts – a
worrying
sign of the extent to which key segments of the French electorate feel disenfranchised.
But equally
worrying
are policies in the European Union that, in the name of defending citizens’ privacy, are leading to the erection of barriers to the free flow of data.
There is no harm in
worrying
about the planet.
Europe’s only good option is to engage with the US administration as closely as possible – which doesn’t mean playing down deeply
worrying
statements made by Trump.
In fact, to the extent that a crisis could do more good than harm, warnings that the rapid credit expansion of recent years could trigger a debt crisis, or that the real-estate sector is on the verge of collapse, may not be as
worrying
as many believe.
Feigned or not, such bafflement from the American president-elect is truly
worrying.
A second
worrying
factor is the FMLN’s links to Cuba and Venezuela.
Most worrying, the crisis has challenged the very idea of European integration.
Both Poland and Hungary also provide
worrying
examples of politicians using nationalist and populist rhetoric to advance goals that reek of incipient authoritarianism.
One response was the decision by the People’s Bank of China to increase the one-year interest rate from 5.31% to 5.58%– its first rate hike in over nine years – in an effort to curb fixed-investment growth, staunch increasing prices, and offset a
worrying
decline in savings.
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