Example sentences of "[modal v] have [adj] implications for [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He said the move could have serious implications for social services , particularly in the implementation of Care in the Community and Child Protection Services .
2 Even a modest sea-level rise of 50 cm could have grave implications for low-lying , island and coastal nations .
3 The results of these discussions , therefore , could have significant implications for authorised firms and the training needs of their members , who may well be asked to demonstrate not only their proven skills in handling such matters but also the level of their knowledge of the market and the products on offer .
4 In Zambia , where the bulk of the Lungu live , the results could have important implications for current official plans to develop the Sumbu national game park , which adjoins Lungu territory , as a major tourist attraction .
5 It could have important implications for American efforts to arrest drug dealers , terrorists and the Panamanian leader , Manuel Noriega , for prosecution in the US .
6 Such decisions may have substantial implications for individual and social welfare and the allocation of scarce resources .
7 Although the hole is primarily located over Antarctica and affects few humans directly , the enhanced ultraviolet radiation reaching the surface or penetrating the upper layer of the oceans surrounding the continent may have serious implications for natural ecosystems .
8 Assessment of the extent to which the widespread , geologically correlated occurrences of mat deposits ( Fig. 1 ) represent synchronous deposition will depend on continuing refinement of Leg 138 time scales but may have major implications for chemical budgets and the rates of biogeochemical cycling .
9 In general the never-married elderly make greater use of statutory services including institutional care than others of the same age , so change in marriage and fertility patterns pointed out by Timaeus may have important implications for future service use .
10 Public debt as a proportion of GDP is already rising steeply ; and if this is allowed to go unchecked , Britain would quickly change from being a low debt to a high debt country with a burden of interest payments which would have serious implications for future levels of taxation .
11 Public debt as a proportion of GDP is already rising steeply ; and if this is allowed to go unchecked , Britain would quickly change from being a low debt to a high debt country with a burden of interest payments which would have serious implications for future levels of taxation .
12 The results of this research will have practical implications for current educational programmes aimed at the prevention of sexual and other forms of child abuse , and theoretical significance for our understanding of children 's theory of mind .
13 This will have profound implications for established roles and relationships , and the development of people with talent to fill the roles .
14 Decisions of the latter kind , about whether to import components or obtain them locally , for instance , or about investment policy in a recession , or pay restraint , can have major implications for national economic performance .
15 Since changes in benefits can have different implications for different individuals , aggregate time series tests of the effect of average benefits may be misleading .
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