Developed
in sentence
3415 examples of Developed in a sentence
To the Jobless EconomySUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA – Nearly all economic forecasts agree that high unemployment in much of the
developed
world will most likely persist for years to come.
One of the most extreme historical examples of technology-induced job loss is, of course, found in agriculture in
developed
countries.
Clearly, when
developed
countries’ agricultural sectors shed workers, long-term structural unemployment did not result.
In
developed
countries, the most disruptive impact to the job market would come from substantial automation of the service sector, which now employs the majority of workers.
Slavery was widespread, including in Europe, when it
developed
in the Americas, where – from the perspective of the Spanish settlers – acute labor shortages prevailed.
After the end of the international slave trade in the 1830s, what
developed
in the Caribbean was not free labor but indentured labor, with East Asians making the journey in exchange for what could be thought of as fixed-term slavery, similar to debt bondage.
These ideas will be
developed
further at a meeting in Paris on November 21, hosted by Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo.
The programs
developed
by the REF ought to be scaled up by governments, with the help of the EU, and made available to all Roma children in Europe.
If the approach
developed
by the REF were generally adopted, it would go a long way toward breaking the stereotypes.
Consider, for example, that no one has ever
developed
a precise way to measure whether and to what extent a government is effective.
Europe and other
developed
economies are aging as well, owing to low fertility rates and increasing longevity.
(China’s wealth distribution is now as skewed as that of the United States, one of the most unequal
developed
countries, where the GPI has not risen since the late 1970’s.)
The reality is that a strategy
developed
today could take a generation to deliver results (think education reform).
Six or seven years ago, there were vague worries that the world economy’s
developed
core could not run indefinitely on one locomotive, the United States, alone.
Without rapid demand growth somewhere in the
developed
world outside the US – and Germany and Japan are the best places to look – it is hard to see how the global economy can balance itself at a high level over the next few years.
Many breakthrough innovations
developed
commercially by private firms originate from government-supported research.
On the organizational side, NATO describes itself as having
developed
“close working relations” with the United Nations, the European Union, and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
Indeed, if multinationals and
developed
countries had an “Interpol” to track down and arrest countries charged with being havens for business piracy, China would likely top the “Most Wanted” list because of its lack of protection of intellectual property rights (IPR).
No surprise, then, that a backward, developing country in the early stages of “catching up” through learning from the
developed
world, sees copying the intellectual advances of others as something like a human right.
Although it has lost ground relative to the emerging markets (especially China), it has far outperformed other
developed
economies like the US and Japan.
If the recession cuts deep in the
developed
nations, many workers will lose their jobs.
Of course, such tradeoffs have long been evident in most economies –
developed
and developing alike.
An Accidental Currency War?LAGUNA BEACH – Six and a half years after the global financial crisis, central banks in emerging and
developed
economies alike are continuing to pursue unprecedentedly activist – and unpredictable – monetary policy.
A global set of “norms of state cyber behavior,”
developed
through multilateral diplomacy, could help to mitigate this threat.
Liberalizing international migration could be another response, though it would be unlikely to offer appreciable relief, owing to social and political opposition to increased immigration in most
developed
countries.
Current greenhouse-gas levels are largely due to industrialization in the
developed
world since the nineteenth century.
Most
developed
countries are targeting reductions in annual emissions of at least 80% – relative to levels in 1990 – by 2050.
“The
developed
world did make the problem…I admit that,” he acknowledged to his rapt audience.
The Brain-Drain Panic ReturnsNEW YORK – While
developed
countries are angst-ridden over mostly illegal immigration by unskilled workers from developing countries, a different set of concerns has surfaced in Africa, in particular, over the legal outflow of skilled, and even more importantly, highly skilled, people to
developed
countries.
In many poor countries, except those like India and South Korea, which have now
developed
superb educational institutions, the brightest citizens receive their education abroad.
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