Developed
in sentence
3415 examples of Developed in a sentence
Frictions between the two partners have
developed
over a wide range of issues, including trade, the renminbi’s exchange rate, regional security, intellectual property, and cyber attacks, among others.
Patenting ProsperityCAMBRIDGE: Most people are aware of the huge inequalities of income that now separate the
developed
and developing world.
Of the foreign inventors, Japanese inventors received 32,000 patents, German inventors 9,500 patents, and another 28,000 among the next 15 countries, all of which are
developed
economies.
It might be considered normal that
developed
countries would be the inventors, and developing countries the users, or new technologies.
After all, rates of severe mental illness are about the same across the
developed
world, yet the US seems to have more such shootings than do other countries.
Malaria-bearing mosquitoes have
developed
a resistance to commonly used insecticides in 61 countries around the world.
While these therapies are being developed, we are also working on a strategy to ensure that patients in malaria-endemic countries can afford them, and to improve the effectiveness of our response by identifying areas where malaria takes the greatest toll.
National and local disaster plans have been improved, standard operating procedures have been developed, and early warning systems have been put in place.
First
developed
for genuine medical needs – such as reconstructive surgery for wounded soldiers – it has morphed into a largely unregulated business worth billions.
It adopts a global perspective and reconciles
developed
and developing countries’ interests, while weighing the broader economic, environmental, and social issues at stake.
Ironically, America, long a zealous advocate of market fundamentalism,
developed
according to its own “Third Way.”US industry grew behind tariff walls.
One exciting experience of my time in the Clinton White House was helping spearhead Vice-President Gore’s “Reinventing Government” initiative, where techniques and policies were
developed
to enhance the efficiency, efficacy, and responsiveness of government agencies.
While economic theory and the evidence underlying these precepts
developed
over the last quarter century, they remain disputed.
The largest such study is the recently completed ReSource project, in which my colleagues and I subjected almost 300 people, over 11 months, to an intense mental-training program,
developed
by a team of experienced mediation teachers, scientists, and psychotherapists.
Several governments – including that of the United Kingdom – have
developed
so-called “nudge units,” which seek to encourage people to make better choices for themselves and society by providing subtle hints, cues, and other suggestions.
Specific guidelines and rating methods need to be
developed.
Economic theory is not sufficiently
developed
to predict major turning points based on first principles or mathematical models.
Selfless SeigniorageNEW YORK – As the central banks of major
developed
economies have intensified quantitative easing (QE, or large-scale purchases of government bonds and other long-term securities), developing-country leaders have increasingly voiced concern about the policy’s adverse impact on their economies’ stability and growth.
Rather, they contend that QE’s positive externalities – namely, a stronger recovery in
developed
economies – will ultimately offset them.
QE has enabled
developed
economies to collect a massive amount of international seigniorage (the interest that a central bank earns on the assets that it holds against the currency that it issues, or the annual increment in the monetary base) from developing countries.
These governments are not only appropriating resources from domestic households and businesses, subtracting from their consumption and investment; given that major
developed
countries issue international-reserve currencies, they are also collecting seigniorage from developing countries’ growing foreign-exchange reserves.
While the privilege of issuing international-reserve currencies allows
developed
countries to accrue international seigniorage, it does not mean that they should use the revenue in whatever ways they wish.
However, a DIT regime is feasible only for larger transition countries with relatively well
developed
financial markets.
Once these countries approach the average income levels of
developed
economies, and their growth slows to typical rich-country rates, their future may look like America today.
Globalization explains some of the bottom-quarter income stagnation in the US and other
developed
economies.
And once software has been developed, the marginal cost of copying it is effectively zero.
The reappearance of the same four arguments
developed
a quarter-century ago by an industry that benefits from delaying climate policies – arguments used with great success precisely because their origin and true purpose were hidden from the public – looks a lot like the tortoise’s four wiggling feet.
While Latin America’s young population has enormous potential – 67% of its population is of working age, and population aging is not yet a major concern, as it is in the
developed
economies – many workers simply lack the skills required to fulfill it.
If Latin America’s companies are to compete effectively with those based in
developed
or emerging economies, the region must urgently remedy this, by raising the skill level of its workforce.
Meanwhile, the technology used at drilling and production platforms has
developed
tremendously, but the challenges regarding depth, weather, and sediment structure have grown even more, as easy-to-exploit oil fields have been exhausted.
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