Had the insurance companies been able to operate the program without government subsidy, it would be fine.
FORBES: Rating The Deficit Panel's Dramatic Entitlement Reforms
It would be fine to set out broad principles for tax reform and say that the details will have to be the result of a negotiation.
Large majorities said it would be fine with them if the next pope were to come from Latin America (85 percent), Africa (80 percent) or Asia (78 percent).
That's not the only way of fixing it, but if you made a slight adjustment like that, then Social Security would be there well into the future and it would be fine.
It may be perfectly fine - and it would be perfectly fine if the borrowers that come from subprime into FHA look a lot like current FHA borrowers in terms of their credit risk profiles.
So Charles Force thought of a creative solution: If he could get more grease around the failed bearing, it would probably be fine.
By making efficiency savings in government and selling state-owned assets, Mr Brown said he could meet debt-cutting targets and he said it would be "fine" if certain programmes - relating to what he described as back-office and administrative functions - were cut.
It would be a bright, fine day with "more sunshine than we have seen in some time".
BBC: Flood fears as snow turns to rain and temperatures rise
It seems like if you had both of those files for all of the cases that should just be a job of matching it up and everything would be fixed and everything would be fine.
That would be fine if it were merely the result of the zeal with which the industry has upgraded its wires.
Williams said the public's attitude about not doing much to protect current beach development would be fine if it were 100 years ago.
It worked fine, and would still be working today if not for World War I, and soon after, the rise of Keynesian notions that governments could manage their economies by jiggering the currency.
FORBES: The 1870-1914 Gold Standard: The Most Perfect One Ever Created
That would be fine, were it not the case that the committee relies for many of its conclusions not only on the evidence put before it by the British government, but also on the representations of British pressure groups, each with their own views about what ails race relations.
It would be unfair to Mr. Knecht's fine reporting to give away more of the story.
It is a fine film, but would Hollywood be happy saluting a picture that is also a vote for euthanasia?
ECONOMIST: This year's Academy awards are really anyone's guess
Said source also claims it has a SIM card slot, which would be fine except for BGR's assertion that 3, 2 is the oft-rumored CDMA iPhone -- you know, the one that Wall Street Journal is all but certain is coming next year.
ENGADGET: iPhone 3,2 rumored to be in near-final testing phase, cue the CDMA speculation
Of those, Apple seems like the best fit, if for no other reason than the company has apparently spent the better part of the past several years dancing around launching a serious TV product and Netflix would be a fine centerpiece for it.
FORBES: As Netflix Goes Mickey Mouse, Take a Trip Back to the Future
Of course there would be many fine details as to terms and conditions to be laid down but it is a vision of a way ahead.
That would be just fine for vendors, since it would spur sales.
No problem, just make it contingent on the performance of the executive, which would be fine if firm managers could isolate individual contributions to firm welfare.
Meanwhile, Nortel also announced that after examining previous accounts with "a fine-tooth comb", it would be restating its results for 2003 for a second time, as well as those for 2004.
If reducing fine particles is so beneficial, it would surely be more transparent and efficient to target them directly.
In practice, this would be fine for some small countries, but it is not too practical for the world as a whole because it would require a very large amount of gold.
But as any fine would be paid by the Treasury, it is hard to see what this would achieve.
ECONOMIST: Railways: Anyone know how to run a railway? | The
"People say: 'Oh, it would be wasted on me', " says Christie's' head of fine wine David Elswood.
Of course, as we know with Medicare, if the government wants to pick up the tab for health care, most Americans would be fine with that, as long as they don't have to pay for it eventually.
This can be helpful in a pinch, obviously, but the game would have been just fine without it.
应用推荐