Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
The Iranian regime continues to defy the international community’s efforts to prevent it from
developing
nuclear weapons.
The closer Iran gets to
developing
a nuclear weapon, the greater the likelihood that Israel, with or without US help, might attack Iran’s nuclear facilities.
And, indeed, the 18 standout emerging economies have twice as many competitive, publicly listed companies with annual revenues of $500 million or more as other
developing
countries (adjusted for economy size).
For starters, a phenomenon known as premature deindustrialization is taking hold, with manufacturing growth in
developing
countries peaking at much lower levels of income than in the past.
In 1714, seven years after one of the worst naval accidents in the history of Britain’s Royal Navy, the United Kingdom launched the Longitude Prize, a £20,000 reward (equal to $5 million today) for
developing
a simple and practical method to determine a ship’s longitude reliably.
The UAE’s toolkit for creative solutions includes the Zayed Future Energy Prize, an annual award for achievement in
developing
and deploying renewable energy and sustainable technologies.
The potential benefits of public investment are not limited to
developing
countries.
Perhaps the effectiveness of legal institutions in
developing
countries and emerging markets is not the only goal.
Ahead of that, a new president should unleash America’s creative potential in boosting energy efficiency and
developing
clean technologies.
Various reports suggest that China is selectively enhancing its strategic and tactical missile capabilities by
developing
solid-fuel motors; diversifying its range of warheads and increasing their accuracy; deploying missiles with multiple warheads; and upgrading its ballistic-missile defense countermeasures, such as decoys, chaff, jamming, and thermal shielding, and possibly maneuverable reentry vehicles (MaRVs) and multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs).
In particular, China is developing, testing, and deploying a new generation of solid-propellant, road-mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).
It is also designing and
developing
new classes of conventional short-range ballistic missiles (SRBMs) and medium-range ballistic missiles (MRBMs), such as the DF-21 – mobile, solid-propellant, longer range, more accurate, and able to exploit vulnerabilities in ballistic missile-defense systems.
As part of its missile and nuclear-force modernization, China is also focusing on
developing
its sea-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) such as the JL-2, testing the DF21-D as an anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM) for maritime strikes, and further
developing
its anti-satellite weapon capabilities (ASAT).
The sad reality is that, despite significant social, political, and economic progress, women still face major personal and professional obstacles in developed and
developing
countries alike.
Developing
small states like Croatia, Oman, Kuwait, and Uruguay may consider exhortations to emulate countries like Switzerland and Norway to be impractical.
Specifically, small
developing
countries should focus on building institutions, such as central banks and finance ministries, that explicitly seek to minimize the macroeconomic volatility associated with globalization.
Surprisingly, very few such alliances exist, with many small countries – especially
developing
ones – cultivating close ties with “big brother” countries or immersing themselves in regional federal structures.
This contrasts sharply with Brazil’s success in
developing
innovative and globally competitive aerospace and agricultural sectors.
Brazil can improve on this record by using profits from the offshore oil fields that it is currently
developing.
Developing
countries, the technocrats said, should do likewise.
This vast "black economy" makes VAT inefficient in most
developing
countries.
Developing
countries that impose a VAT perversely encourage production to remain in the informal sector, which often produces the goods that are consumed domestically or used as inputs in the developed world.
There are other sources of tax revenue in many
developing
countries that are both more equitable and distort economic incentives far less than VAT.
Many
developing
countries lack a corporate income tax: the huge profits of the telecom, cement, and other monopoly sectors escape taxation.
You don't need an economics doctorate to recognize that, in
developing
countries, you can't impose a tax on all commodities.
As Africa looks to the future,
developing
its enormous energy resources - through both national and regional efforts - must be given high priority.
The Green Climate Fund, established by the United Nations to help
developing
countries mitigate CO2 emissions and adapt to climate change, should include provisions specifically for indigenous people, along the lines of the Climate Investment Fund’s Dedicated Grant Mechanism.
True, falling demand for natural resources in China (which accounts for nearly half of global demand for base metals) has had a lot to do with the sharp declines in these prices, which have hit many
developing
and emerging economies in Latin America and Africa hard.
During 2009-2014,
developing
countries collectively received a net capital inflow of $2.2 trillion, partly owing to quantitative easing in advanced economies, which pushed interest rates there to near zero.
The search for higher yields drove investors and speculators to
developing
countries, where the inflows increased leverage, propped up equity prices, and in some cases supported a commodity price boom.
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