Competitiveness
in sentence
1286 examples of Competitiveness in a sentence
Because, as the World Economic Forum noted, smaller gender gaps are directly correlated with increased economic
competitiveness.
This year is the centennial of his masterpiece, "In Search of Lost Time," and it's the most exhaustive study of sexual jealousy and just regular competitiveness, my brand, that we can hope to have.
We want them to deliver prosperity, growth, competitiveness, transparency, justice and all of those things.
Well, to level the playing field and protect the
competitiveness
of its industries, Country A would tax imports from Country B based on their carbon content.
And that broader approach is at the heart of our economic strategy, where we give equal importance to tackling inequality as we do to economic
competitiveness.
Both national
competitiveness
and national security are at risk.
On the
competitiveness
front, we all know that Toyota has more market cap than the big three put together.
The movie, The Right Stuff, like the book is more about male behavior among other men such as constant competitiveness, earning respect among peers, showing who's more competent, who "maintains an even strain" in the face of adversity, who has "The Right Stuff".
The by-the-numbers screenplay by Greg DePaul, June Diane Raphael, and former SNL regular Casey Wilson could have been a sharp satire on the excesses of wedding-related commerce or a black comedy about
competitiveness
among the superficially entitled, either approach of which I would have praised.
The parents are all into it, and their
competitiveness
rubs off on the kids.
The movie is mostly about the
competitiveness
of those on a college campus, to see who can be the wittiest and most pretentiousness.
Once confidence began to recover and market conditions stabilized, the East Asian economies shifted their monetary and fiscal policies toward expansion and embraced large-scale exchange-rate depreciation – efforts that enhanced their export
competitiveness.
In the same way,
competitiveness
councils could monitor the evolution of wages and prices, employment and growth, and the current account, and provide recommendations to national governments and social partners.
Both the EU Commission and the European Central Bank argue that macroeconomic imbalances in Europe are largely the result of widening
competitiveness
disparities.
Thus, deficit countries have to control price and wage growth to improve competitiveness, while surplus countries may have to accept some inflation.
First, there is no close relationship between external positions and
competitiveness
trends – not with some of the price and cost
competitiveness
that the EU Commission and the ECB examine, and not with output-based
competitiveness
(export growth and change in export market shares).
That indicator is often used by the EU Commission and the ECB as a proxy for the divergence in
competitiveness
trends within the eurozone but in fact it does not measure price and cost
competitiveness
as such; instead, it captures the price effects of changes in aggregate demand.
But, even if EU members’ current-account positions are mainly driven by domestic-demand factors, international
competitiveness
does matter.
Still, if
competitiveness
underpins the sustainability of trade deficits, there is in principle no good economic reason to impose short-run measures – price and cost adjustments – for the purpose of achieving a long-term objective, unless the purpose of price and cost adjustment is indeed to dampen demand.
In the 1980’s, the United Kingdom’s North Sea-driven oil and gas boom undermined the country’s broad-based economic competitiveness, while Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s government wasted much of the revenue on handouts that encouraged excessive consumption.
They saw a clear edge in Japan’s
competitiveness
relative to the North Atlantic across a broad range of high-tech precision and mass-production industries manufacturing tradable goods.
These factors, together with rent capture and winner-take-all markets, can entrench inequality and blunt markets’
competitiveness.
One hopes that this is the first step toward an integrated approach that addresses the forces impeding technology diffusion, undermining competitiveness, and exacerbating inequality.
But entering Europe’s economic and monetary union was meant to induce the political system to pursue longer-term goals such as productivity growth and enhanced
competitiveness.
Last year, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, with the backing of the four largest eurozone economies – Germany, France, Italy, and Spain – called for a €130 billion ($170 billion) stimulus package to improve
competitiveness
across the EU.
Technological breakthroughs have boosted these energy sources’
competitiveness
relative to fossil fuels.
In a joint report on the
competitiveness
of the Arab countries, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the World Economic Forum call for urgent institutional reform to support private-sector growth.
Reforms must aim to bolster inclusivity, advance environmental sustainability, promote innovation, and boost
competitiveness.
Indeed, continued real-wage growth is forcing inefficient industries that relied solely on cheap labor out of the market, while bolstering the
competitiveness
of producers that appeal to the evolving tastes of China’s increasingly potent consumers.
Some, like stronger fiscal rules and closer surveillance of policies affecting competitiveness, might help to head off some future crisis, but they will do nothing to resolve this one.
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