Destination
in sentence
365 examples of Destination in a sentence
Indeed, by 2007, central and eastern Europe had become the second most important export
destination
for euro-zone countries.
Its logical
destination
was the country with the deepest financial markets, the US, where it raised asset prices to unsustainable heights.
And the result has been a backlash against it, first in
destination
countries, and now, as Poland’s just-concluded presidential election suggests, in countries of origin.
Until now, the discussion about European migration has taken place mostly within rich
destination
countries, like France and the UK.
Although the United States remains the main
destination
of Latin American and Caribbean exports, Asia is becoming an increasingly important market for goods based on natural resources.
I hope that by the time I take up my pen again, we will be on our way to this
destination.
Second, immigration is a great compliment to those countries that migrants choose as their final
destination.
This means abandoning the assumption that all EU members are heading for the same destination, and an end to treating non-euro countries as second-class laggards (described condescendingly as “pre-ins”).
His choice of
destination
– Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city and his political base, rather than Islamabad, the county’s capital – suggests the depth of the crisis now bubbling below the surface.
According to Juma, that number is expected to double over the next two years, making China “Africa’s leading
destination
for science and engineering education.”
That implies that we all agree on the
destination
and differ only about the speed of the journey.
I don't want to reach the
destination
that some of our partners may aspire to.
Within the so-called G-10 developed economies, Australia has the largest direct exposure to Japan – the
destination
of about 19% of its total exports.
In short, China’s government is confusing a path with the final
destination
– a point that I stressed in my remarks to the CDF, in which I argued that China is in the early stages of rebalancing its economy toward services and consumption.
Until recently, China seemed their ultimate destination, claiming an ever larger share of investment by Asia’s huge production networks.
Migrant smuggling is a worldwide phenomenon, affecting almost every state as a country of origin, transit, or
destination.
And both are triggering nativist responses in
destination
countries.
Multinational executives frequently cite China as their favorite investment destination, but many of them also complain about rampant graft.
With the prospect of modest rates of return in advanced economies, China has inevitably become a more attractive investment destination, despite a significant risk that China will someday experience its own sharp slowdown and financial crisis.
Too often, congressional trips to distant countries have been held up to ridicule upon media revelations that the trip included a tourist
destination
or, worse, a shopping excursion.
But, for all the misery of air travel in America, when you get to your
destination
it can still blow your socks off.
A resolution of the crisis in Syria would certainly help Turkey, especially given its role as the prime
destination
for refugees from the chaos there; but the governance shortcomings with which Turks must reckon are profound.
We often think of history as something inevitable, a culmination of great, grinding forces that can only lead to one
destination.
Likewise, Farage, having helped drive Britain to disaster, blithely walked away when the
destination
was reached.
That is why resistance to immigration so often relies on a common misperception that it has a profound and perverse economic impact on both source and
destination
countries.
Migrants are believed to impose a fiscal burden on
destination
countries’ welfare systems or to take their citizens’ jobs.
Despite some
destination
countries’ efforts to facilitate the migration of workers with particular skills, state-dictated screening methods cannot keep up with mutable labor markets.
Although both source and
destination
countries would benefit from more open borders, global immigration reform is not currently politically feasible.
Foreign-born populations have been shown to strengthen the fiscal positions of several
destination
countries.
They view cooperation as infeasible, given the natural competition between
destination
and source countries for the most productive workers.
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