For the function \( f(x) = \sin x - bx + C \) to be decreasing for \( x \in \mathbb{R} \), its derivative \( f'(x) \) must be non-positive for all \( x \). Compute the derivative:
\( f'(x) = \cos x - b \)
For \( f(x) \) to be decreasing, we need:
\( \cos x - b \leq 0 \) for all \( x \)
This implies:
\( \cos x \leq b \)
Since the range of \( \cos x \) is \([-1, 1]\), to satisfy \( \cos x \leq b \) for all \( x \), \( b \) must be greater than or equal to the maximum value of \(\cos x\):
\( b \geq 1 \)
Hence, for the function to be strictly decreasing, \( b \) must be:
\( b > 1 \)