Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
Equity markets in other
developing
countries also witnessed similar dramatic increases during this period.
But the capital flows are now reversing, turning negative for the first time since 2006, with net outflows from
developing
countries in 2015 exceeding $600 billion – more than one-quarter of the inflows they received during the previous six years.
The largest outflows have been through banking channels, with international banks reducing their gross credit exposures to
developing
countries by more than $800 billion in 2015.
There will be large knock-on effects on the real economy, including severe damage to
developing
countries’ growth prospects.
This is not the first time that
developing
countries have faced the challenges of managing pro-cyclical hot capital, but the magnitudes this time are overwhelming.
The stockpile of reserves may partly explain why huge outflows have not triggered a full-blown financial crisis in
developing
countries.
Corporate sectors in
developing
countries, having increased their leverage with capital inflows during the post-2008 period, are particularly vulnerable.
Developing
countries should resist the temptation of raising interest rates to stem capital outflows.
This would entail, for example, restricting capital transfers between parent banks in developed countries and their subsidiaries or branches in
developing
countries.
Following the successful Malaysian example in 1997,
developing
countries could also temporarily suspend all capital withdrawals to stabilize capital flows and exchange rates.
This is perhaps the only recourse for many
developing
countries to avoid a catastrophic financial crisis.
The Rousseff administration is also creating incentives (subsidies, directed credit, and even some new import tariffs) aimed at
developing
certain sectors.
After all, the current strategy has not really worked either as a deterrent against conventional attacks (which persisted throughout the years that Israel supposedly developed its nuclear arsenal) or as a warning to rivals (such as Iran) against
developing
a nuclear weapon.
Stop Taxing the SickWASHINGTON, DC – The debate over access to affordable medicines in emerging and
developing
countries frequently overlooks a critical issue: Governments in these countries routinely slap tariffs and other taxes on vitally important drugs.
Like developed countries, emerging and
developing
countries import some – if not all – of their medicines, the cost of which is mainly covered by the patients themselves, given these countries’ lack of health insurance.
Developing
countries justify these taxes by claiming that they fund social spending.
India, hailed as “the pharmacy to the
developing
world,” is one of the largest exporters of finished drugs, while China produces 70-80% of these drugs’ active ingredients.
To be sure, tax cuts would not address all of the many challenges surrounding access to healthcare in emerging and
developing
countries, such as the lack of hospitals, clinics, doctors, and public and private insurance.
China, India, and the other BRICS should form a similar coalition to press for the elimination of pharmaceutical tariffs, thereby broadening access to health care throughout the
developing
world.
In
developing
these new data systems, governments, businesses, and civil-society groups should promote four distinct purposes.
Consider a
developing
country that has free and preferential market access to its largest neighbor, which also happens to be the world’s most powerful economy.
Indeed, today’s US predicament contrasts sharply only with the current experiences of
developing
Asia.
This is the real trade distortion in the global economy – one in which millions of poor people in
developing
countries are hurt as America helps some of the world’s richest farmers.
While a transition to a low-carbon, resource-efficient economy is gaining traction globally, some claim either that it is merely a glossy repackaging of the sustainable-development agenda, or, worse, a plot to constrain rather than liberate growth in
developing
and least-developed countries.
The inherent logic offers, perhaps for the first time, a sustainable growth paradigm that is suited to
developing
and developed countries alike.
How far it will fly will depend on smart policies by national governments in developed and
developing
countries, and on forward-looking policies by regional development banks, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and bilateral development finance by OECD countries.
The G-20 summit in Toronto has the opportunity, if not the responsibility, to enable this transition by taking a leadership role in support of
developing
economies’ aspirations.
Street sweepers in
developing
countries are arguably less threatened by automation than their counterparts in developed countries, because their jobs are less mechanized and lower paid.
Although TVET is becoming increasingly popular in Asia’s
developing
economies, its quality is often poor.
At the end of the day, Asia’s
developing
countries need policies that support workers, rather than jobs.
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