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Discover Ludwig'economic restraints' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use 'economic restraints' to refer to limitations imposed on an economy or individual due to lack of resources. For example, "Recent economic restraints have forced many businesses to close."
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Maude said extra money had been allocated because, despite economic restraints, cyber security is a priority concern for the government.
While there is a need, economic restraints, poor marketing conditions and lack of trained, affordable manpower limit the ability of local farmers to expand retail markets by opening and operating farmstands in new, low-income communities.
"My best guess," Mr. Beck said, "is that the economic restraints are going to be offset by the rigidities of the sentencing laws of the 1990's, which required longer sentences.
Our only hope is that the undecideds in Congress consider that unemployment in their districts will not always be under 4percentt, and that when recession or aggression bites, voters will not forget who threw away economic restraints on China.
The philosophes, building on Locke and others and embracing many and varied currents of thought with a common supreme faith in reason, vigorously attacked religious and scientific dogmatism, intolerance, censorship, and social and economic restraints.
Although the agreement would keep the harshest economic sanctions in place, some experts said any significant relief would lead to a collapse in the system of economic restraints that has cut Iran's oil exports in half and decimated its currency.
Similar(36)
attempts to help those countries, but also tries to discipline them by requiring sometimes severe economic restraint.
Yet, the cost of the Administration's pol icy of economic restraint in terms of unemployed re sources has been consider ably higher than originally planned.
At a time of economic restraint there are legitimate debates to be had about replacement funding for the arts, but crimes against the environment are crimes against humanity, and oil money is an expedient too far.
"The market clearly is not pricing in $100 oil and the economic restraint on growth that would be implied in that," said Stuart A. Schweitzer, the global markets strategist at JPMorgan Private Bank, a unit of JPMorgan Chase.
Moreover, the slide in Nasdaq stocks is viewed as a force for economic restraint since rapid gains in them have contributed to consumers' feeling of wealth and their willingness to spend.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com