Sentences with phrase «clearly see outcomes»

Not exact matches

In addition, with a clearly defined inflation objective, it is important that the Reserve Bank continues to report on how it sees developments in the economy, currently and in prospect, affecting expected inflation outcomes.
We see clearly in the result of the 2016 presidential election that political outcomes can act as a brake on runaway cultural agendas promoted by activists and elites at the extremes of public opinion.
Yet while Niebuhr is clearly an advocate of such an outcome, I see no reason why the use of his five categories should dictate that result.
It was an almost unthinkable outcome before the game seeing Blackpool were making their Premier League début against a club which recorded home wins over both Chelsea and Liverpool last season, but if the Tangerines had any fear whatsoever they clearly didn't so any affects, as Blackpool rammed home a heart sent message to the rest of the league that if the club are to go down, they're going to go down fighting.
In my opinion, we have to pay attention to results of sensitivity analyses because this allows us to see the results based on studies which were definitely known to be eligible or clearly described their methods and outcomes
I agree that the redistributive settlement needs to be embedded within society's concept of how things work rather than seen as after - the - fact «meddling» in outcomes, but I think this is incompatible with a government that very clearly is meddling in all kinds of things, as New Labour did.
I see that Corbyn is 1/8 on to win against Smith, so that is clearly by far the likeliest outcome.
Looking back, I see clearly that the choices I made, the people I surrounded myself with and dated, the job I had as a waitress for 13 years, that all of these things reflected my expectation to be disappointed with the outcome of my life.
Until the measures that are incorporated into the Quality Counts ratings are more clearly tied to education outcomes, we are likely to see continued shifts in rankings that bear little resemblance to actual changes in education quality.
Here's Hamilton's critique, which doesn't deal with the core argument of my talk (the need for a shift in goals from numerical outcomes to societal qualities) and instead focuses on my use of the word «good» in relation to an era he clearly sees as awful:
Here's Hamilton's critique, which doesn't deal with the core argument of my talk (the need for a shift in goals from numerical outcomes to societal qualities) and instead focuses on my use of the word «good» in relation to an era he clearly sees as awful: Read more...
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