Sentences with phrase «then changed the policy»

Initially they didn't plan that but then changed the policy.
«If a site can capture your listing data until it has strong consumer acceptance and then change its policy regarding protections, you've simply bought into tomorrow's problems.»

Not exact matches

On December 14, she said that if anyone thought her comments reflected a change in Fed policy, then they were mistaken.
She was the only leader who recognized that if the objective is to stimulate growth in the near term, then Ottawa has to change the way it frames economic policy.
A 1994 Pentagon policy preventing women from serving in combat was rescinded in 2013 by then - Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, and ultimately led to the current DoD head Ash Carter making the historic change.
If the original tax base is $ 263 billion and if nothing else changes — the assumption you have to make in assessing the effects of a policythen this information is enough to put some numbers on the sort of revenues you can expect to generate by an increase in corporate tax revenues.
«The change in how people understand issues and perceive one another have to come first and when we have a lot of organizing and engagement around that sea change, then we're going to see policy changes occur.»
But then again, so is demographics, water scarcity, technological change, creativity, policy choices, public sentiment, corruption, cultural differences, new forms of energy and a myriad of other factors, all interacting in unpredictable ways.
But significant changes in policies since then — not least, lower primary surpluses and a weak reform effort that will weigh on growth and privatization — are leading to substantial new financing needs.
Powell, appointed to the Fed board in 2012 by then - President Barack Obama, emerged as Trump's choice from a five - person slate of possible nominees that included Yellen as well as others who would have represented a sharp change in monetary policy.
But since then, in the words of Stuart Anderson, executive director of the National Foundation for American Policy, «the world has changed, but immigration hasn't.»
If, as I have indicated, the U.S. growth and inflation outlooks have not changed notably, then why have expectations about U.S. monetary policy shifted so much?
If economic circumstances change, then monetary policy needs to change too.
If this is the only avenue our democracy has to change trade policy, then we're all for it.
Since then, investors have become more skeptical about policy change and hence less bullish about U.S. equity markets.
«All of our plans on disaster recovery are premised with the federal government coming in with a big chunk of short - term FEMA money and then a big chunk of long - term bailout money,» said Edward Richards, director of the Louisiana State University Climate Change Law and Policy Project.
In terms, I think of inflation and bond markets, it took six, seven, eight, maybe 10 years of high inflation in the 1970s before you had Paul Volcker brought in to say «enough is enough,» and then again whether it's led by American monetary policy but similar moves in Europe, obviously in the UK, a significant tightening of monetary policy because people got fed up with inflation and I don't think that we are kind of yet at the point where real wages have been suppressed so much by that irritation that inflation is always running ahead, life is becoming more expensive, so we need the central bank radically to change their policy.
Then, of course, we'll have the governments forcing new kinds of systems or policy changes such as helicopter money to push more money into our society and that's when we start to get into hyperinflation.
Like, he bought into Coca - Cola when it changed its capital allocation policies, he encouraged Washington Post to change its capital allocations policies while he owned it, and then he bought General Dynamics when it changed its capital allocation policies.
Remember that time Facebook changed its API and its data privacy policies and then managed to accidentally lock a whole lot of people out of their Tinder accounts?
There is nothing stopping these groups from keeping their policies but if they want to continue getting funding from the university then they need to change, its that simple.
when a superst ition can dominate the landscape and change real world policy to the point that the state can be used to enforce religious dogma then enough is enough... it needs to go.
Crisis books usually follow a predictable pattern: first a searing depiction of the problem at hand, then some broad and sweeping assessments of how great changes in attitude might begin to address the issue, and then some piddling and timid policy proposals that clearly won't begin to meet the challenge.
Somewhere, sometime in the 1980s, some Hungarian bureaucrats who few heard of then and probably even fewer remember now drafted that policy — and changed the world.
This is simply scared old white men who will hide behind their dogma until they are forced to change and then they will receive another magical «revelation» and change the policy.
That's d u m b Allan, if it were just policies being discussed, then Billy would have had no reason to change the religious definition of «cult» as far as the status of Mormonism goes....
@ Mohawk no you are not wrong, WENGER slightly changed his subs policy, when he was feeling the heat of angry fans, critics from the owners (Uzmanov), losing incredible games or letting ANDERLECHT ran us over at the Emirates, it was only then when he realized that he needed to bring SUBS and not just sit there petrified playing with his zipper or mumbling fruitless complaints against he 4th official.
Look at the transfers since then, incoming and outgoing, you will see a clear change in transfer policy.
If Arsenal want change and be successful then the policy and structure will need to be rewritten to accommodate for that, and hence the obstacles that prevent it happening will need to be removed.
I disagree with u ryan the playwrs we got from southampton hve been so inconsistant and u then you say origi ings etc were bought at a steal and will be worth more in time to come so u agree with fsg policy buy potential and once they become better players sell them for a profit sorry but thats my opinion we need to hold on to the better players than compliment them with other great players fsg have turned liverpool into a selling club to fill there bck pockets this was never the liverpool way and now because of this fsg policy is the reason were mid table klopp needs to be given the funds he needs to change things only then can we judge him i just hope he is given the chance before he decides to walk YNWA
Then, in July, a Have Baby Will Travel Facebook friend pointed out that the KLM car seat policy had changed and directed me to a link on their website.
UNICEF wrote to Nestlé's then Chief Executive Officer (now Chairman), Peter Brabeck - Letmathé, defending Cracking the Code as supporting its own findings and set out several areas where Nestlé policies needed to change (it took years of campaigning to pressure Nestlé to change its policy on complementary foods, criticised in the UNICEF letter — see boycott successes).
Then Tough took a strong stance against public education and our system citing some radical policy changes.
It has been an honour to negotiate and then serve in the first coalition government of modern times which has substantial achievements both in reducing the economic dangers faced by our country, and in making progress with policies to tackle climate change and provide energy security.
If the UK government chooses to pursue pro-development policies, maintain its powerful and varied role on the word stage, and to make a concerted effort to change the tone of the political debate, then opportunities will emerge.
Policymaking also reflects current ideology and background structures power so if we focus too much on impact as government policy change then you make academics into people who service the dominant ideology and the powerful in society.
He spends a fair section of it on rather technical aspects of the growing presence of security and defence policy at the EU level, exploring why states delegate security / defence functions to the EU, and how EU officials then manage to navigate a way through the fast - changing international environment.
If Ed Balls can somehow overcome his communication problems, give a handful of stonking breakthrough speeches & break free of his policy - advisor persona, becoming an authentic embodiment of the cultural change (to list an incline of decreasing probability), then he could well make a late surge in this race... or maybe not.
That tradition changed in 1995, when then - governor William Weld persuaded the state committee to adopt a winner - take - all policy in the hopes of boosting the candidacy of former California governor Pete Wilson.
A Cuomo administration source insisted that nothing about the policy as outlined by Irvin has changed, and then took a shot (albeit anonymously) at the Spitzer folks for questioning that.
«If Jeremy Corbyn wins, that would change everything... We wouldn't rush into affiliating but would want to work very closely to develop policy together — and if that goes well then let's see where we end up,» he told the FT after Corbyn's leadership bid was announced.
That is why at our conference, instead of trying to create some artificial dividing lines between Liberal Democrat policy and Conservative policy, my message will be: if you want rid of Gordon Brown and the big brother state, and if you care about our schools, our quality of life and our liberties, then join us in one national movement that can bring real change.
McMahon said the same thing happened 30 years ago, when then - President Ronald Reagan and Congress were changing tax policies and rates.
«Then corporate media had to cover that and policy may change now,» she said.
Hannan's old friend, Mark Reckless, who was a Tory then Ukip MP and then a Ukip and now Tory Welsh Assembly member, said that the then Conservative leadership was «not serious about real change on Europe», and privately described the ERG as «a backwater with little real influence on policy till the arrival of Steve Baker.»
If there was a change of policy then that change would be highly puzzling, given that the current Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, has been an outspoken critic of the House of Lords over many years.
«If the Commission believes that the privacy protections granted by the IRS undermine accountability in the electoral process, then it should lobby Congress to make changes, but the Commission's charge does not pertain to reevaluation of those federal laws and policies,» the filing says.
The «nitty - gritty» of how patents are developed and then protected is a big issue when it comes to the role technology can play in the future of energy security and climate change policy, for example.
Jay then suggests politicians don't change their policies and keep newspapers sweet for fear of a personal attack.
«Chris Grayling was just so truly awful [as justice secretary] that of course it is better to have Gove than Grayling, but if what Gove does is emollient words with no change in the funding policies, then maybe it was better to see the beast as it was truly was than nice phrases and words wrapping it all up.»
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