THE HINDU EDITORIAL- 6th November 2017

a) Change, yet continuity: on Jerome Powell’s nomination as US Fed Chief

President Donald Trump’s decision to name Federal Reserve Board Governor Jerome Powell as his pick to head the central bank signals that the businessman-turned-politician has plumped for continuity even as he ushers in change. For a President whose first nine months in office have been marked by a succession of signature appointments to key posts ranging from a Supreme Court Justice to heads of federal regulatory bodies, the choice of the 64-year-old lawyer and former investment banker suggests that Mr. Trump’s business instincts won. Mr. Powell, who was appointed by President Barack Obama as Fed Governor in 2012 and worked alongside the incumbent Chair, Janet Yellen, over the past five years, will represent policy continuity in the monetary management of the world’s largest economy. After all, with the economic engine ticking over nicely and creating jobs, and the markets buoyant, there was little reason for Mr. Trump to run the risk of choosing someone who may have altered the calibrated approach the Fed has adopted in overseeing the recovery from the global financial crisis. Two of the other short-listed probables — Kevin Warsh and John Taylor — had both been critics of the Fed’s actions. That Mr. Powell had served in the Treasury Department during the George H.W. Bush administration means that he will, in all likelihood, receive bipartisan backing in the Senate. Emerging markets, including India, can heave a small sigh of relief with Mr. Trump’s choice, given the influence the Fed’s interest rate decisions have on global capital flows. Delivering a lecture on ‘Prospects for Emerging Market Economies in a Normalising Global Economy’ last month, Mr. Powell acknowledged the challenges these economies faced as a result of the ‘normalisation’ of global financial conditions — shorthand for the slow but sure reining in of the easy money conditions that had undergirded policy responses to the financial crisis. And crucially, he stressed that “the best thing the Federal Reserve can do — not just for the United States, but for the global economy at large — is to keep our house in order through the continued pursuit of our dual mandate” of fostering economic conditions that achieve both stable prices and maximum sustainable employment. But it is not only the stability aspect that won Mr. Powell the nod. A former Carlyle Group partner with a stated keenness to adopt a light-touch approach to regulation, he is expected to be closely aligned to Mr. Trump’s positions on easing regulatory oversight of big banks and financial markets. And with other top positions at the central bank to be filled by the President soon, Mr. Powell could end up overseeing a Fed that reflects Mr. Trump’s political leanings as well.


b) Beyond big game hunting: the ‘Quadrilateral’ meeting

 

By accepting an invitation to join the Japan-proposed, U.S.-endorsed plan for a “Quadrilateral” grouping including Australia to provide alternative debt financing for countries in the Indo-Pacific, India has taken a significant turn in its policy for the subcontinent. Explaining the need to invite other countries into what India has always fiercely guarded as its own turf, Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar was remarkably candid. “Our neighbours also feel more secure if there is another party in the room,” he said recently, giving examples of working with the U.S. on transmission lines in Nepal or with Japan on a liquefied natural gas pipeline in Sri Lanka. His words contain a tacit admission: that having India in the room is no longer comforting enough for our neighbours.

The Quad pivot?

As Prime Minister Narendra Modi heads to the East Asia summit in the Philippines next week, where the first ‘Quad’ meeting is likely to be held, it is necessary that India analyse the impact of this admission on all our relations. It would also serve as a useful exercise to understand why India has conceded it requires “other parties” in the neighbourhood, even as it seeks to counter the influence of China and its Belt and Road Initiative. One reason is that as a growing economy with ambitious domestic targets, India’s own needs often clash with those of its neighbours. More connectivity will eventually mean more competition, whether it is for trade, water resources, or energy. Take, for example, the case of Bhutan, which is working, with India’s assistance, on its own goal of producing 10,000 MW of hydropower by 2020. Even as Indian and Chinese troops were facing off at Doklam on land claimed by Bhutan, a very different sort of tension was claiming the attention of the government in Thimphu. The first indicator came on May 8, when in his budget speech at the National Assembly, the Bhutanese Finance Minister warned that the external debt is about 110% of GDP, of which a staggering 80.1% of GDP (or 155 billion Nu, or $2.34 billion) is made up by hydropower debt mainly to India. In April, the International Monetary Fund’s world economic outlook had already put Bhutan at the top of South Asia in terms of the highest debt per capita, second only to Japan in all of Asia for indebtedness. The budget figures attracted much criticism for the Bhutanese government, and opposition taunts that Bhutan could become the “Greece of South Asia” forced Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay to appoint a three-member committee. In a government order he said that said the negative media, public perception and “absence of strategy” could even affect the “larger and more important relationship between Bhutan and India.” Among the committee’s findings were that Bhutan’s external hydropower debt financed by India at 9-10% rates was piling up, with the first interest and principal payments expected in 2018, and construction delays, mainly due to Indian construction issues, were taking the debt up higher. Above all, despite several pleas to the Ministries of External Affairs and Power, the Cross Border Trade of Electricity (CBTE) guidelines issued by India had not been revised, which put severe restrictions on Bhutanese companies selling power, and on allowing them access to the power exchange with Bangladesh. In the Power Ministry’s reckoning, relations with Bhutan took a backseat to the fact that India already has a power surplus, and its new renewable energy targets come from solar and wind energy, not hydropower. Moreover, given falling prices for energy all around, India could not sustain the Bhutanese demand that power tariffs be revised upwards. Eventually, it wasn’t until early October that Mr. Jaishankar visited Thimphu and subsequently the visit last week of King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck began to address the problem that has been brewing for more than a year.

History of forgetting

Another problem is what one diplomat in the region calls ‘India’s big game hunting attitude’: “India chases its neighbours to cooperate on various projects and courts us assiduously, but once they have ‘bagged the game’, it forgets about us. As a result, crises grow until they can no longer be ignored, and the hunt begins again.” Over the past decade, since the defeat of the LTTE, India passed up offers to build the port in Hambantota, Colombo, and Kankesanthurai, despite Sri Lanka’s pressing need for infrastructure. At the time, given India’s crucial support in defeating the LTTE, Sri Lanka was considered “in the bag”. With the U.S. and other Western countries also taking strident positions over human rights issues and the reconciliation process, Chinese companies stepped in and won these projects, for which Sri Lanka recklessly took loans from China’s Exim bank. New Delhi has changed its position on Hambantota several times, going from initial apathy, to disapproval of the Chinese interest, to scoffing at the viability of the project, to open alarm at the possibility of any Chinese PLA-Navy installation in Sri Lanka’s southern tip. Finally this year, upturning everything it has said, the government decided to bid for the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport at Hambantota, a $205 million investment for the empty facility that sees an average of two flights a day. Even as a ‘listening post’, it is an expensive proposition, with some officials now suggesting a flight training school at Mattala to defray the cost. India is also hoping to win the bid to develop Trincomalee port with several projects. Clearly India is moving in now to build a counter to China in the neighbourhood, but it may be too little, too late and a little too expensive. India has also been ambivalent on tackling political issues in its region, often trapped between the more interventionist approach of the U.S., which has openly championed concerns over ‘democratic values’ and human rights in Sri Lanka, Maldives and Bangladesh, and the approach of China, which is to turn a blind eye to all but business and strategic interests. In Nepal, India lost out to China when it allowed a five-month-long blockade at the border, calling for a more inclusive constitution to be implemented by Kathmandu — but in the case of Myanmar, it lost precious ground in Bangladesh when Mr. Modi refused to mention the Rohingya refugee situation during a visit to Nay Pyi Taw. In both cases, India reversed its stand, adding to the sense that it is unsure of its next steps when dealing with neighbours on political issues.

Multiple rivalries

Finally, it is important to note that while the government’s new plan to involve the U.S. and Japan in development projects in South Asia will yield the necessary finances, it will come at the cost of India’s leverage in its own backyard. India’s counter to China’s persistent demand for a diplomatic mission in Thimphu, for example, could be to help the U.S. set up a parallel mission there — but once those floodgates open, they will be hard to shut. In Sri Lanka, the U.S. and Japan will now partner in India’s efforts to counter China’s influence, but whereas India objected to Chinese naval presence in the Indian Ocean, it will not be able to object to an increase in U.S. naval warships and Japanese presence there. Writing about Myanmar in a new book, India Turns East: International Engagement and US-China Rivalry, the former French diplomat Frédéric Grare says the emergence of new players like the U.S., Europe and Japan has only increased multiple regional rivalries in the region.“This does partly benefit India, who is no longer isolated vis-à-vis Beijing,” he concludes. “But New Delhi’s political profile has consequently diminished.” Mr. Modi, who began his pitch for his “neighbourhood first” plan by inviting the neighbours to his swearing-in ceremony in 2014, must look before he leaps while inviting other powers, howsoever well-meaning, into the neighbourhood.

Words/Vocabulary

1) Plumped

Meaning: Decide definitely in favour of (one of two or more possibilities).

Example: “offered a choice of drinks, he plumped for brandy”

Synonyms: Choose, Pick

2) Ushers

Meaning: Show or guide (someone) somewhere.

Example: “a waiter ushered me to a table”

Synonyms: Escort, Help

3) Ranging

Meaning: Place or arrange in a row or rows or in a specified manner.

Example: “a table with half a dozen chairs ranged around it”

Synonyms: Align, Arrange

4) Instincts

Meaning: A natural or intuitive way of acting or thinking.

Example: “they retain their old authoritarian instincts”

Synonyms: Urge, Inclination

5) Incumbent

Meaning: Necessary for (someone) as a duty or responsibility.

Example: “the government realized that it was incumbent on them to act”

Synonyms: Binding, Mandatory

Antonyms: Optional

6) Ticking

Meaning: Mark (an item) with a tick or select (a box) on a form, questionnaire, etc. to indicate that something has been chosen, checked, approved, or dealt with.

Example: “just tick the appropriate box below”

Synonyms: Mark, Indicate

7) Buoyant

Meaning: (of an economy, business, or market) involving or engaged in much successful trade or activity.

Example: “car sales were buoyant”

Synonyms: Booming, Strong

Antonyms: Depressed

8) Calibrated

Meaning: Carefully assess, set, or adjust (something abstract).

Example: “the regulators cannot properly calibrate the risks involved”

Synonyms: Assess, Abstract

9) Overseeing

Meaning: Supervise (a person or their work), especially in an official capacity.

Example: “the Home Secretary oversees the police service”

Synonyms: Supervise, Inspect

10) Normalisation

Meaning: The process of bringing or returning something to a normal condition or state.

Example: “the normalization of the situation will make the area more conducive to business activities”

Synonyms: Original position

11) Reining

Meaning: Keep under control; restrain.

Example: “with an effort, she reined back her impatience”

Synonyms: Restrain, Check

12) Undergirded

Meaning: Secure or fasten from the underside, especially by a rope or chain passed underneath.

Example: “that’s a philosophy that needs to undergird retailers’ business plans this year”

Synonyms: Help, Secure

13) Light-touch

Meaning: A situation in which only a few people are in charge of something or something is not controlled very strictly.

Example: I think we have five account managers covering the whole United States, so it’s a light touch.

Synonyms: Smoothly, Softly

14) Leanings

Meaning: A tendency or partiality of a particular kind.

Example: “his early leanings towards socialism”

Synonyms: Inclination, Tendency

15) Turf

Meaning: Force (someone) to leave somewhere.

Example: “they were turfed off the bus”

Synonyms: Remove, Eject

Antonyms: Add, Include

16) Comforting

Meaning: Serving to alleviate a person’s feelings of grief or distress.

Example: “we would like to thank our family and friends for their support and their comforting words”

Synonyms: Console, Solace

Antonyms: Distress, Depress

17) Conceded

Meaning: Admit or agree that something is true after first denying or resisting it.

Example: “I had to concede that I’d overreacted”

Synonyms: Admit, Accept

Antonyms: Deny, Decline

18) Ambitious

Meaning: (of a plan or piece of work) intended to satisfy high aspirations and therefore difficult to achieve.

Example: “an ambitious enterprise”

Synonyms: Difficult, Exacting

Antonyms: Modest, Easy

19) Staggering

Meaning: Astonish or deeply shock.

Example: “I was staggered to find it was six o’clock”

Synonyms: Astonish, Amaze

20) Taunts

Meaning: Provoke or challenge (someone) with insulting remarks.

Example: “pupils began taunting her about her weight”

Synonyms: Torment, Provoke

21) Perception

Meaning: Intuitive understanding and insight.

Example: “‘He wouldn’t have accepted,’ said my mother with unusual perception”

Synonyms: Insight, Percipience

22) Reckoning

Meaning: The action or process of calculating or estimating something.

Example: “the sixth, or by another reckoning eleventh, Earl of Mar”

Synonyms: Calculation, Estimation

23) Hunting

Meaning: Search determinedly for someone or something.

Example: “he desperately hunted for a new job”

Synonyms: Search, Look

24) Assiduously

Meaning: With great care and perseverance.

Example: “leaders worked assiduously to hammer out an action plan”

Synonyms: Care

25) Strident

Meaning: (of a sound) loud and harsh; grating.

Example: “his voice had become increasingly strident”

Synonyms: Harsh, Grating

Antonyms: Soft, Dulcet

26) Reconciliation

Meaning: The restoration of friendly relations.

Example: “his reconciliation with your uncle”

Synonyms: Reunion, Conciliation

Antonyms: Alienation, Feud

27) Recklessly

Meaning: Without regard to the danger or the consequences of one’s actions; rashly.

Example: “he was driving recklessly and lost control”

Synonyms: Without danger

28) Scoffing

Meaning: Speak to someone or about something in a scornfully derisive or mocking way.

Example: “Patrick professed to scoff at soppy love scenes in films”

Synonyms: Mock, Ridicule

29) Upturning

Meaning: Turn (something) upwards or upside down.

Example: “a sea of upturned faces”

Synonyms: Improvement, High Level

Antonyms: Downturn

30) Bid

Meaning: An attempt or effort to achieve something.

Example: “he made a bid for power in 1984″

Synonyms: Attempt, Effort

31) Ambivalent

Meaning: Having mixed feelings or contradictory ideas about something or someone.

Example: “some loved her, some hated her, few were ambivalent about her”

Synonyms: Equivocal, Uncertain

Antonyms: Certain, Unequivocal

32) Interventionist

Meaning: Favouring intervention, especially by a government in its domestic economy or by one state in the affairs of another.

Example: “an economy currently dominated by state ownership and interventionist policies”

Synonyms: Intervene

33) Floodgates

Meaning: A gate that can be opened or closed to admit or exclude water, especially the lower gate of a lock; a last restraint holding back an outpouring of something powerful or substantial.

Example: “his lawsuit could open the floodgates for thousands of similar claims”

34) Rivalries

Meaning: Competition for the same objective or for superiority in the same field.

Example: “there always has been intense rivalry between the clubs”

Synonyms: Competitiveness

35) Isolated

Meaning: Having minimal contact or little in common with others.

Example: “he lived a very isolated existence”

Synonyms: Solitary, Lonely

Antonyms: Sociable

36) Vis-à-Vis

Meaning: In relation to; with regard to.

Example: “many agencies now have a unit to deal with women’s needs vis-à-vis employment”

Synonyms: Compared

37) Diminished

Meaning: Make or become less.

Example: “the new law is expected to diminish the government’s chances”

Synonyms: Decrease, Decline

Antonyms: Increase

38) Swearing-in

Meaning: An official ceremony in which someone starting a new official job formally promises to be loyal and honest and to perform their duties well.

Example: She had a good seat at the president’s swearing-in ceremony.

Synonyms: Initiate, Ceremonial

39) Leaps

Meaning: Move quickly and suddenly.

Example: “Polly leapt to her feet”

Synonyms: Spring, Jump

40) Well-meaning

Meaning: Wanting to have a good effect, but not always achieving one.

Example: I know he’s well meaning, but I wish he’d leave us alone.

 

 

 

THE HINDU EDITORIAL 06-11-2017

  1. a) Change, yet continuity: on Jerome Powell’s nomination as US Fed Chief

President Donald Trump’s decision to name Federal Reserve Board Governor Jerome Powell as his pick to head the central bank signals that the businessman-turned-politician has plumped for continuity even as he ushers in change. For a President whose first nine months in office have been marked by a succession of signature appointments to key posts ranging from a Supreme Court Justice to heads of federal regulatory bodies, the choice of the 64-year-old lawyer and former investment banker suggests that Mr. Trump’s business instincts won. Mr. Powell, who was appointed by President Barack Obama as Fed Governor in 2012 and worked alongside the incumbent Chair, Janet Yellen, over the past five years, will represent policy continuity in the monetary management of the world’s largest economy. After all, with the economic engine ticking over nicely and creating jobs, and the markets buoyant, there was little reason for Mr. Trump to run the risk of choosing someone who may have altered the calibrated approach the Fed has adopted in overseeing the recovery from the global financial crisis. Two of the other short-listed probables — Kevin Warsh and John Taylor — had both been critics of the Fed’s actions. That Mr. Powell had served in the Treasury Department during the George H.W. Bush administration means that he will, in all likelihood, receive bipartisan backing in the Senate. Emerging markets, including India, can heave a small sigh of relief with Mr. Trump’s choice, given the influence the Fed’s interest rate decisions have on global capital flows. Delivering a lecture on ‘Prospects for Emerging Market Economies in a Normalising Global Economy’ last month, Mr. Powell acknowledged the challenges these economies faced as a result of the ‘normalisation’ of global financial conditions — shorthand for the slow but sure reining in of the easy money conditions that had undergirded policy responses to the financial crisis. And crucially, he stressed that “the best thing the Federal Reserve can do — not just for the United States, but for the global economy at large — is to keep our house in order through the continued pursuit of our dual mandate” of fostering economic conditions that achieve both stable prices and maximum sustainable employment. But it is not only the stability aspect that won Mr. Powell the nod. A former Carlyle Group partner with a stated keenness to adopt a light-touch approach to regulation, he is expected to be closely aligned to Mr. Trump’s positions on easing regulatory oversight of big banks and financial markets. And with other top positions at the central bank to be filled by the President soon, Mr. Powell could end up overseeing a Fed that reflects Mr. Trump’s political leanings as well.

  1. b) Beyond big game hunting: the ‘Quadrilateral’ meeting

By accepting an invitation to join the Japan-proposed, U.S.-endorsed plan for a “Quadrilateral” grouping including Australia to provide alternative debt financing for countries in the Indo-Pacific, India has taken a significant turn in its policy for the subcontinent. Explaining the need to invite other countries into what India has always fiercely guarded as its own turf, Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar was remarkably candid. “Our neighbours also feel more secure if there is another party in the room,” he said recently, giving examples of working with the U.S. on transmission lines in Nepal or with Japan on a liquefied natural gas pipeline in Sri Lanka. His words contain a tacit admission: that having India in the room is no longer comforting enough for our neighbours.

The Quad pivot?

As Prime Minister Narendra Modi heads to the East Asia summit in the Philippines next week, where the first ‘Quad’ meeting is likely to be held, it is necessary that India analyse the impact of this admission on all our relations. It would also serve as a useful exercise to understand why India has conceded it requires “other parties” in the neighbourhood, even as it seeks to counter the influence of China and its Belt and Road Initiative. One reason is that as a growing economy with ambitious domestic targets, India’s own needs often clash with those of its neighbours. More connectivity will eventually mean more competition, whether it is for trade, water resources, or energy. Take, for example, the case of Bhutan, which is working, with India’s assistance, on its own goal of producing 10,000 MW of hydropower by 2020. Even as Indian and Chinese troops were facing off at Doklam on land claimed by Bhutan, a very different sort of tension was claiming the attention of the government in Thimphu. The first indicator came on May 8, when in his budget speech at the National Assembly, the Bhutanese Finance Minister warned that the external debt is about 110% of GDP, of which a staggering 80.1% of GDP (or 155 billion Nu, or $2.34 billion) is made up by hydropower debt mainly to India. In April, the International Monetary Fund’s world economic outlook had already put Bhutan at the top of South Asia in terms of the highest debt per capita, second only to Japan in all of Asia for indebtedness. The budget figures attracted much criticism for the Bhutanese government, and opposition taunts that Bhutan could become the “Greece of South Asia” forced Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay to appoint a three-member committee. In a government order he said that said the negative media, public perception and “absence of strategy” could even affect the “larger and more important relationship between Bhutan and India.” Among the committee’s findings were that Bhutan’s external hydropower debt financed by India at 9-10% rates was piling up, with the first interest and principal payments expected in 2018, and construction delays, mainly due to Indian construction issues, were taking the debt up higher. Above all, despite several pleas to the Ministries of External Affairs and Power, the Cross Border Trade of Electricity (CBTE) guidelines issued by India had not been revised, which put severe restrictions on Bhutanese companies selling power, and on allowing them access to the power exchange with Bangladesh. In the Power Ministry’s reckoning, relations with Bhutan took a backseat to the fact that India already has a power surplus, and its new renewable energy targets come from solar and wind energy, not hydropower. Moreover, given falling prices for energy all around, India could not sustain the Bhutanese demand that power tariffs be revised upwards. Eventually, it wasn’t until early October that Mr. Jaishankar visited Thimphu and subsequently the visit last week of King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck began to address the problem that has been brewing for more than a year.

History of forgetting

Another problem is what one diplomat in the region calls ‘India’s big game hunting attitude’: “India chases its neighbours to cooperate on various projects and courts us assiduously, but once they have ‘bagged the game’, it forgets about us. As a result, crises grow until they can no longer be ignored, and the hunt begins again.” Over the past decade, since the defeat of the LTTE, India passed up offers to build the port in Hambantota, Colombo, and Kankesanthurai, despite Sri Lanka’s pressing need for infrastructure. At the time, given India’s crucial support in defeating the LTTE, Sri Lanka was considered “in the bag”. With the U.S. and other Western countries also taking strident positions over human rights issues and the reconciliation process, Chinese companies stepped in and won these projects, for which Sri Lanka recklessly took loans from China’s Exim bank. New Delhi has changed its position on Hambantota several times, going from initial apathy, to disapproval of the Chinese interest, to scoffing at the viability of the project, to open alarm at the possibility of any Chinese PLA-Navy installation in Sri Lanka’s southern tip. Finally this year, upturning everything it has said, the government decided to bid for the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport at Hambantota, a $205 million investment for the empty facility that sees an average of two flights a day. Even as a ‘listening post’, it is an expensive proposition, with some officials now suggesting a flight training school at Mattala to defray the cost. India is also hoping to win the bid to develop Trincomalee port with several projects. Clearly India is moving in now to build a counter to China in the neighbourhood, but it may be too little, too late and a little too expensive. India has also been ambivalent on tackling political issues in its region, often trapped between the more interventionist approach of the U.S., which has openly championed concerns over ‘democratic values’ and human rights in Sri Lanka, Maldives and Bangladesh, and the approach of China, which is to turn a blind eye to all but business and strategic interests. In Nepal, India lost out to China when it allowed a five-month-long blockade at the border, calling for a more inclusive constitution to be implemented by Kathmandu — but in the case of Myanmar, it lost precious ground in Bangladesh when Mr. Modi refused to mention the Rohingya refugee situation during a visit to Nay Pyi Taw. In both cases, India reversed its stand, adding to the sense that it is unsure of its next steps when dealing with neighbours on political issues.

Multiple rivalries

Finally, it is important to note that while the government’s new plan to involve the U.S. and Japan in development projects in South Asia will yield the necessary finances, it will come at the cost of India’s leverage in its own backyard. India’s counter to China’s persistent demand for a diplomatic mission in Thimphu, for example, could be to help the U.S. set up a parallel mission there — but once those floodgates open, they will be hard to shut. In Sri Lanka, the U.S. and Japan will now partner in India’s efforts to counter China’s influence, but whereas India objected to Chinese naval presence in the Indian Ocean, it will not be able to object to an increase in U.S. naval warships and Japanese presence there. Writing about Myanmar in a new book, India Turns East: International Engagement and US-China Rivalry, the former French diplomat Frédéric Grare says the emergence of new players like the U.S., Europe and Japan has only increased multiple regional rivalries in the region.“This does partly benefit India, who is no longer isolated vis-à-vis Beijing,” he concludes. “But New Delhi’s political profile has consequently diminished.” Mr. Modi, who began his pitch for his “neighbourhood first” plan by inviting the neighbours to his swearing-in ceremony in 2014, must look before he leaps while inviting other powers, howsoever well-meaning, into the neighbourhood.

Words/Vocabulary

1) Plumped

Meaning: Decide definitely in favour of (one of two or more possibilities).

Example: “offered a choice of drinks, he plumped for brandy”

Synonyms: Choose, Pick

2) Ushers

Meaning: Show or guide (someone) somewhere.

Example: “a waiter ushered me to a table”

Synonyms: Escort, Help

3) Ranging

Meaning: Place or arrange in a row or rows or in a specified manner.

Example: “a table with half a dozen chairs ranged around it”

Synonyms: Align, Arrange

4) Instincts

Meaning: A natural or intuitive way of acting or thinking.

Example: “they retain their old authoritarian instincts”

Synonyms: Urge, Inclination

5) Incumbent

Meaning: Necessary for (someone) as a duty or responsibility.

Example: “the government realized that it was incumbent on them to act”

Synonyms: Binding, Mandatory

Antonyms: Optional

6) Ticking

Meaning: Mark (an item) with a tick or select (a box) on a form, questionnaire, etc. to indicate that something has been chosen, checked, approved, or dealt with.

Example: “just tick the appropriate box below”

Synonyms: Mark, Indicate

7) Buoyant

Meaning: (of an economy, business, or market) involving or engaged in much successful trade or activity.

Example: “car sales were buoyant”

Synonyms: Booming, Strong

Antonyms: Depressed

8) Calibrated

Meaning: Carefully assess, set, or adjust (something abstract).

Example: “the regulators cannot properly calibrate the risks involved”

Synonyms: Assess, Abstract

9) Overseeing

Meaning: Supervise (a person or their work), especially in an official capacity.

Example: “the Home Secretary oversees the police service”

Synonyms: Supervise, Inspect

10) Normalisation

Meaning: The process of bringing or returning something to a normal condition or state.

Example: “the normalization of the situation will make the area more conducive to business activities”

Synonyms: Original position

11) Reining

Meaning: Keep under control; restrain.

Example: “with an effort, she reined back her impatience”

Synonyms: Restrain, Check

12) Undergirded

Meaning: Secure or fasten from the underside, especially by a rope or chain passed underneath.

Example: “that’s a philosophy that needs to undergird retailers’ business plans this year”

Synonyms: Help, Secure

13) Light-touch

Meaning: A situation in which only a few people are in charge of something or something is not controlled very strictly.

Example: I think we have five account managers covering the whole United States, so it’s a light touch.

Synonyms: Smoothly, Softly

14) Leanings

Meaning: A tendency or partiality of a particular kind.

Example: “his early leanings towards socialism”

Synonyms: Inclination, Tendency

15) Turf

Meaning: Force (someone) to leave somewhere.

Example: “they were turfed off the bus”

Synonyms: Remove, Eject

Antonyms: Add, Include

16) Comforting

Meaning: Serving to alleviate a person’s feelings of grief or distress.

Example: “we would like to thank our family and friends for their support and their comforting words”

Synonyms: Console, Solace

Antonyms: Distress, Depress

17) Conceded

Meaning: Admit or agree that something is true after first denying or resisting it.

Example: “I had to concede that I’d overreacted”

Synonyms: Admit, Accept

Antonyms: Deny, Decline

18) Ambitious

Meaning: (of a plan or piece of work) intended to satisfy high aspirations and therefore difficult to achieve.

Example: “an ambitious enterprise”

Synonyms: Difficult, Exacting

Antonyms: Modest, Easy

19) Staggering

Meaning: Astonish or deeply shock.

Example: “I was staggered to find it was six o’clock”

Synonyms: Astonish, Amaze

20) Taunts

Meaning: Provoke or challenge (someone) with insulting remarks.

Example: “pupils began taunting her about her weight”

Synonyms: Torment, Provoke

21) Perception

Meaning: Intuitive understanding and insight.

Example: “‘He wouldn’t have accepted,’ said my mother with unusual perception”

Synonyms: Insight, Percipience

22) Reckoning

Meaning: The action or process of calculating or estimating something.

Example: “the sixth, or by another reckoning eleventh, Earl of Mar”

Synonyms: Calculation, Estimation

23) Hunting

Meaning: Search determinedly for someone or something.

Example: “he desperately hunted for a new job”

Synonyms: Search, Look

24) Assiduously

Meaning: With great care and perseverance.

Example: “leaders worked assiduously to hammer out an action plan”

Synonyms: Care

25) Strident

Meaning: (of a sound) loud and harsh; grating.

Example: “his voice had become increasingly strident”

Synonyms: Harsh, Grating

Antonyms: Soft, Dulcet

26) Reconciliation

Meaning: The restoration of friendly relations.

Example: “his reconciliation with your uncle”

Synonyms: Reunion, Conciliation

Antonyms: Alienation, Feud

27) Recklessly

Meaning: Without regard to the danger or the consequences of one’s actions; rashly.

Example: “he was driving recklessly and lost control”

Synonyms: Without danger

28) Scoffing

Meaning: Speak to someone or about something in a scornfully derisive or mocking way.

Example: “Patrick professed to scoff at soppy love scenes in films”

Synonyms: Mock, Ridicule

29) Upturning

Meaning: Turn (something) upwards or upside down.

Example: “a sea of upturned faces”

Synonyms: Improvement, High Level

Antonyms: Downturn

30) Bid

Meaning: An attempt or effort to achieve something.

Example: “he made a bid for power in 1984″

Synonyms: Attempt, Effort

31) Ambivalent

Meaning: Having mixed feelings or contradictory ideas about something or someone.

Example: “some loved her, some hated her, few were ambivalent about her”

Synonyms: Equivocal, Uncertain

Antonyms: Certain, Unequivocal

32) Interventionist

Meaning: Favouring intervention, especially by a government in its domestic economy or by one state in the affairs of another.

Example: “an economy currently dominated by state ownership and interventionist policies”

Synonyms: Intervene

33) Floodgates

Meaning: A gate that can be opened or closed to admit or exclude water, especially the lower gate of a lock; a last restraint holding back an outpouring of something powerful or substantial.

Example: “his lawsuit could open the floodgates for thousands of similar claims”

34) Rivalries

Meaning: Competition for the same objective or for superiority in the same field.

Example: “there always has been intense rivalry between the clubs”

Synonyms: Competitiveness

35) Isolated

Meaning: Having minimal contact or little in common with others.

Example: “he lived a very isolated existence”

Synonyms: Solitary, Lonely

Antonyms: Sociable

36) Vis-à-Vis

Meaning: In relation to; with regard to.

Example: “many agencies now have a unit to deal with women’s needs vis-à-vis employment”

Synonyms: Compared

37) Diminished

Meaning: Make or become less.

Example: “the new law is expected to diminish the government’s chances”

Synonyms: Decrease, Decline

Antonyms: Increase

38) Swearing-in

Meaning: An official ceremony in which someone starting a new official job formally promises to be loyal and honest and to perform their duties well.

Example: She had a good seat at the president’s swearing-in ceremony.

Synonyms: Initiate, Ceremonial

39) Leaps

Meaning: Move quickly and suddenly.

Example: “Polly leapt to her feet”

Synonyms: Spring, Jump

40) Well-meaning

Meaning: Wanting to have a good effect, but not always achieving one.

Example: I know he’s well meaning, but I wish he’d leave us alone.