Advanced
in sentence
3466 examples of Advanced in a sentence
Indeed, even firms in
advanced
industrial countries that have not received a subsidy are at an unfair advantage.
In
advanced
economies, that message reflects three trends.
Second, there is a widespread belief that
advanced
economies’ urban elites – in government, the media, and business – are either uninterested or unable to address their societies’ most serious problems: economic inequality, banking crises, aging populations and overburdened social-security systems, terrorism, porous borders, rapidly changing community identities, and much else.
Such initiatives are more commonly associated with
advanced
economies than with developing countries.
The devaluation
advanced
China’s strategic goal of turning the renminbi into an international reserve currency – and, in the long term, into a credible global challenger to the US dollar.
Another possibility, which can accompany the first one, is that Mexico’s rapid opening to imports has bifurcated its economy between a relatively small number of technologically advanced, globally competitive winners, and a growing segment of firms, particularly in services and retail trade, that serve as the residual source of employment.
Whether they return to the path of convergence with the
advanced
economies will largely depend on how they approach an increasingly complex economic environment.
Nonetheless, in an increasingly open global environment, characterized by strong growth (and demand) in the
advanced
economies, the emerging economies managed to make huge and rapid progress.
Slower growth in the
advanced
economies has also weakened trade flows, adding to the headwinds.
Reforming China’s Commanding HeightsMILAN – Chinese President Xi Jinping’s massive anti-corruption campaign has
advanced
a number of key objectives: It has gone a long way toward restoring confidence in the Communist Party’s commitment to a merit-based system; countered a decades-old pattern of public-sector domination; reduced the power of vested interests to block reform; and bolstered Xi’s popularity among private-sector actors, if far less so with the bureaucracy.
But experience with the microeconomic dynamics of
advanced
economies (where China is headed) makes this a weak stance – and, thus, one that Xi is unlikely to take.
Meanwhile, many
advanced
economies have suffered considerably from their balance-sheet composition, with limited, poorly measured assets and outsize debt and non-debt liabilities.
But such efforts have so far focused on “hardware” modernization – allocating resources for the procurement and acquisition of selected
advanced
weapons technologies, systems, and platforms, and integrating them into existing organizational force structures and operational concepts.
The country has yet to develop a credible armament-production base like that of, say, Japan, which is co-developing
advanced
weapons systems with the US.
This shift would seem to favor the
advanced
economies, whose industries are at the frontier in employing digital technologies in their products and operations.
Propelled by demand and outsourcing from
advanced
economies, emerging markets won a growing share of the soaring trade in goods; by 2014, they accounted for more than half of global trade flows.
Ogarkov’s ineptness (and inept mendacity), together with the mounting failure since 1979 of the Soviet Union’s war in Afghanistan, exposed the system’s
advanced
decrepitude.
Governments elsewhere increasingly view such digital policies as a way to catch up with
advanced
digital economies, like the United States.
In multilateral and bilateral agreements, developing countries accept restrictions on their “policy space” in exchange for better market access to
advanced
economies.
Why, then, does the message resonate far beyond the United States, and even the
advanced
economies, to include workers in many of the developing countries that are typically portrayed as globalization’s main beneficiaries?
Inequality is surging, especially in the
advanced
economies.
In today’s crisis, we have seen some agile and creative reactions from central bankers in
advanced
economies.
Japan will also reportedly sell Vietnam two
advanced
radar-based earth observation satellites.
Resuscitating ideas
advanced
in the wake of Argentina’s earlier default, some experts proposed creating an international bankruptcy court in the IMF.
Life expectancy might well be only 80 years by mid-century – about where it is now in
advanced
countries – if medical progress is disappointing or is offset by new threats or hazards.
The IMF can play an important role in this regard, owing to its truly global perspective – one that encompasses both
advanced
economies and emerging and developing economies, which are increasingly integrating into the global financial system.
The members that we represent –
advanced
and emerging countries in Asia and Europe – want to play a role in re-establishing a strengthened IMF at the heart of the international monetary system.
Today the
advanced
countries that are the most exposed to the international economy are also those where safety nets and social insurance programs – welfare states – are the most extensive.
Clinton’s proposed risk fee resembles one
advanced
by President Barack Obama’s administration in 2010 in order to discourage risky activity by the largest banks, while helping to recoup some revenue from bailouts.
Today, however,
advanced
biofuels are not based on food, but on waste from industry, agriculture, and private households.
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