Developed
in sentence
3415 examples of Developed in a sentence
Norms can be suggested and
developed
by a variety of policy entrepreneurs.
Demographic differences are relevant not just in comparing Japan and the US, but also in explaining most of the differences in longer-term growth rates across
developed
economies.
One reason for this perception may be that China collects more taxes from producers, and less from consumers, than most
developed
economies.
Although the Merck project successfully raised money for Costa Rican biodiversity research, few if any drugs have been developed, and the model has not been transferred elsewhere.
Money for NothingBRUSSELS – The
developed
world seems to be moving toward a long-term zero-interest-rate environment.
Other countries – Brazil, South Africa, and China among the major emerging economies, and Japan and Australia among the
developed
countries – should back such “garbage-free” PTAs as well.
The NIH and the US Department of Veterans Affairs, however, had heavily funded the start-up that
developed
the drug and was later acquired by Gilead.
Isolation of Russia would be counterproductive, merely aggravating its highly
developed
sense of victimization and possibly turning it into a “rogue” state – truly a nightmare scenario, given that Russia has the world’s largest nuclear arsenal.
By contrast, investing in a company like Tesla Motors – which has now
developed
a rechargeable battery for home use, which could lead to a sharp increase in the number of households switching to solar power – looks far more attractive.
Indeed, following Singapore’s example, China has
developed
a sophisticated and comprehensive system for selecting and promoting political leaders that involves decades of training and a battery of exams for officials at various stages of their careers.
Instead, it has
developed
a nuclear weapons program that threatens stability in the region and places a heavy burden on its economy.
With ever more powerful processors, silicon chess players
developed
the ability to calculate so far ahead that the distinction between short-term tactical calculations and long-term strategic planning became blurred.
After eight years of aggressive stimulus,
developed
economies are emerging from an extended deleveraging phase that naturally suppressed growth from the demand side.
This lesson is apparent in the experience of developing countries, but it applies to
developed
economies, too.
Almost none of these four considerations is a significant feature of the policy framework that currently prevails in most
developed
countries.
In the United States, where markets, the judiciary, and regulation are highly developed, the imperative is not institutional reform, but policy reform – addressing the weak fiscal position, income and wealth inequities, unemployment, health care, and deteriorating physical infrastructure.
But, though the SDGs will thus stand on solid legal ground, that ground must be
developed
further.
Rather, it will have to be
developed
proactively, with a sense of urgency and in close partnership with the affected countries and the communities within them.
The big problems, of course, are how we take account of past responsibility for the carbon in the atmosphere, how we balance aggregate national emissions and per capita figures – China leads in the first category; the US, Australia, and Canada are the biggest culprits in the second – and how we manage technology transfer from
developed
to emerging and poor economies.
In the 12 years since its transition to democracy, Indonesia has regularly held local and national elections,
developed
a functioning free market, and strengthened its culture of tolerance towards the country’s Christian, Hindu, Buddhist, and Chinese minorities.
Moreover, this model –
developed
by Peter Petri and Michael Plummer, from Brandeis and Johns Hopkins Universities, respectively, building on a long line of similar frameworks by them and others – foresees relatively insignificant cost to employment in affected industries.
The links now being
developed
in Myanmar will reduce China’s dependence on the Strait of Malacca by more than one-third.
The widespread focus on efficiency and renewable energy stems from the dissemination of the Kaya Identity, which the Japanese economist Yoichi Kaya
developed
in 1993.
As
developed
countries were plunged into debt crises, with shrinking asset values and declining exchange rates, China’s international purchasing power grew.
Countries like New Zealand and Peru, unable to depend on
developed
countries for export demand, signed bilateral free-trade agreements with China.
Likewise, when
developed
countries cut back on their foreign investment, China stepped in to inject much-needed capital into the global economy.
(If the number of refugees turned out to be beyond Australia’s capacity, a regional approach could be
developed
later, involving resettlement in other countries.)
With China’s productivity still well below that of
developed
countries, and allocational efficiency likely to improve in the next ten years as labor and capital are redistributed across the country, 3% TFP growth is feasible.
More opportunities for broad and deep encounters between Muslims and non-Muslims must be
developed
and sustained, at both the individual and institutional levels.
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, many Muslim thinkers – most famously Jamal al-Din al-Afghani – believed that embracing many of the ideals
developed
in the West during the Enlightenment was the only way to promote progress.
Back
Next
Related words
Countries
Which
World
Economies
Their
Developing
Years
Other
Would
Could
Characters
Growth
System
There
Economic
Global
Being
Should
People
About