Developed
in sentence
3415 examples of Developed in a sentence
As matters stand, central banks in
developed
countries find all sorts of ways to justify their policies, without acknowledging the unmentionable – that the exchange rate may be the primary channel of transmission.
In order to accelerate progress, governance of the clinical trials must be transparent, and all knowledge about the disease, including developments regarding potential treatments and vaccines, must be shared openly – imperatives that will require strong public-health leadership in both the Mano River countries and the
developed
world.
Of course, at the end of the day, the total shift in voting power from
developed
to developing countries was only about 2.7%.
Similarly, a taboo against using poisonous gases in warfare
developed
after World War I, and the 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibited the use of chemical and biological weapons.
In that sense, efforts to prevent cyber conflict cannot be like the nuclear arms control that
developed
during the Cold War, which involved elaborate treaties and detailed verification protocols.
But their ability to grow is being impaired because they lack the resources to confront the massive business lobbies of the EU’s most
developed
and richest countries.
Resolving such conflicts requires, at a minimum, some baseline rules of the game, which can be
developed
and implemented only on a multilateral basis, not in the unilateral way that China demands.
According to the United Nations’ report World Economic Situation and Prospects 2016, the average growth rate in
developed
economies has declined by more than 54% since the crisis.
This is surprising, because, as
developed
economies with fully open capital accounts, they should have benefited from the free flow of capital and international risk sharing – and thus experienced little macroeconomic volatility.
Given that QE managed to sustain near-zero interest rates for almost seven years, it should have encouraged governments in
developed
countries to borrow and invest in infrastructure, education, and social sectors.
Moreover, the UN report clearly shows that, throughout the
developed
world, private investment did not grow as one might have expected, given ultra-low interest rates.
In 17 of the 20 largest
developed
economies, investment growth remained lower during the post-2008 period than in the years prior to the crisis; five experienced a decline in investment during 2010-2015.
While ultra-low interest rates yielded few benefits for
developed
countries, they imposed significant costs on developing and emerging-market economies.
Outside of
developed
democracies, persistent lapses in inclusiveness are nearly always devastating for long-term growth and development, and often lead to violence and civil strife – a tendency that the Growth Report of the Commission on Growth and Development highlighted several years ago.
Recent electoral outcomes, including Trump’s election, highlight the intensifying economic grievances of many households across the
developed
world.
Over the longer term, population aging represents a major challenge for a social-security system that already spends, as a share of GDP, as much as
developed
countries, where the share of the population 65 and over is twice that of Brazil.
But it also reveals a newly
developed
– and highly potent – asset, one that Turkey’s neighbors should also seek to cultivate: a strong middle class willing and able to mobilize against extremist threats.
CCS was originally
developed
for enhanced oil recovery (EOR), whereby pressurized CO2 is pumped into older oil reservoirs to extract otherwise inaccessible crude oil, significantly boosting production, and thus greenhouse-gas emissions.
The first leg of the offensive was the idea of the “Indo-Pacific” region, which Clinton
developed
a year ago and followed up this year with an essay called “America’s Pacific Century.”There, she defines the new region of US strategic engagement as “stretching from the Indian subcontinent to the western shores of the Americas.”
Managing the transformation of China’s regional economies while preserving social stability will demand a careful balance between the old growth strategy exemplified by the losers, which relied heavily on state-owned enterprises and public investment, and the new, more human-capital-oriented approach being
developed
by the winners.
Greater health and safety, however, should not (and need not) come at the expense of developing countries, whose citizens want the fruits of prosperity that
developed
countries’ citizens have long enjoyed.
One reason for this extraordinary growth is that carmakers have
developed
more affordable cars for a new, cost-conscious middle class.
Because social media companies, for all their power and potential, never
developed
the journalistic capacities needed to displace traditional news media, the pendulum has changed direction.
Al Gore’s climate adviser, James Hansen, argues that if we allow developing countries to “come up to the level of the
developed
world, then the planet is done for.”
This trend is being driven partly by demographics:
developed
countries are aging fast, while Asia, Africa, and Latin America have burgeoning populations that are both young and increasingly wealthy, implying both substantial dynamism and greater competition for resources.
In view of the serious risks that Europe has assumed, in full awareness of the consequences, it is of the utmost importance that a European “Grand Strategy” for the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East be developed, so that Europe can calmly and clearly define its interests.
Iran’s natural gas resources, if developed, would not be a substitute for cheap nuclear power, because gas is more profitable in other uses than in power generation.
If these pressures are allowed to persist, many migrants will ultimately make it to the
developed
world, one way or another.
As a former trade minister for Costa Rica, I know how difficult it is for countries –
developed
and developing alike – to craft trade policies that deliver benefits to all of their people.
Study participants would be followed over decades to see who
developed
the disease, and which tests proved positive before Alzheimer’s was diagnosed.
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