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"seem to stem from" is a correct, usable phrase in written English.
This phrase is used to indicate that something can be traced back to a particular source or cause. For example: "The recent economic downturn seems to stem from a drop in consumer spending."
Exact(59)
Still, some complaints seem to stem from the F.B.I.'s shifting status under Mr. Ashcroft.
This attitude to parenting – and Chan's work ethic – both seem to stem from his upbringing.
The colorings spoken about in the Yoga Sutras seem to stem from this at the core.
The pasted screeds that appeared with the splatters seem to stem from such concerns.
Issues — basic services, economic development, security — all seem to stem from identity as much as politics.
FirstEnergy's problems seem to stem from each of its big predecessor companies: Ohio Edison, Centerior Energy and GPU.
Part of the mass umbrage would seem to stem from a misunderstanding of the magazine and its cover.
The songs, re-ochestrated for a four-piece orchestra, also never seem to stem from a precise social context, but become a series of discrete numbers.
Yet many of the problems, including the lack of bathrooms and the overcrowding, seem to stem from design flaws more than hurried construction.
The disagreements voiced by some geographers regarding the role of fieldwork in geographic research seem to stem from the variety of practices that geographers count as 'fieldwork'fieldwork
Similar(1)
Some police activity seemed to stem from the attacks.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com