Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
All that will be decided by the West’s globally dominant automobile industry is whether it will adapt and have a chance to survive or go the way of other old Western industries: to the
developing
world.
Flexibility and uncertainty define informal markets in
developing
countries.
Nonetheless, informal markets in
developing
countries provide a vast field for experimentation to transform a patchwork of jobs into a steady upward path for workers.
UN Deputy Secretary-General Mark Malloch Brown has pointed out that there is distrust between representatives of populous
developing
nations and those from wealthier states – a stand-off he calls “numbers versus pocketbooks”.
Nine out of ten deaths from communicable diseases in the
developing
world are avoidable.
List of priorities, outcome document from Copenhagen Consensus by UN ambassadors, June 16-17 2006 at Georgetown University:challengeopportunity1Communicable DiseasesScaled-up basic health services2Sanitation and WaterCommunity-managed water supply and sanitation3EducationPhysical expansion4Malnutrition and HungerImproving infant and child nutrition5Malnutrition and HungerInvestment in technology in
developing
country agriculture6Communicable DiseasesControl of HIV/AIDS7Communicable DiseasesControl of malaria8Malnutrition and HungerReducing micro nutrient deficiencies9Subsidies and Trade BarriersOptimistic Doha: 50% liberalization10EducationImprove quality / Systemic reforms11Sanitation and WaterSmall-scale water technology for livelihoods12EducationExpand demand for schooling13Malnutrition and HungerReducing Low Birth Weight for high risk pregnancies14EducationReductions in the cost of schooling to increase demand15Sanitation and WaterResearch to increase water productivity in food production16MigrationMigration for development17CorruptionProcurement reform18ConflictsAid post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict19Sanitation and WaterRe-using waste water for agriculture20MigrationGuest worker policies21Sanitation and WaterSustainable food and fish production in wetlands22CorruptionGrassroots monitoring and service delivery23CorruptionTechnical assistance to develop monitoring and transparency initiatives24MigrationActive immigration policies25Subsidies and Trade BarriersPessimistic Doha: 25% liberalization26CorruptionReduction in the state-imposed costs of business/government relations27Climate ChangeThe Kyoto Protocol28ConflictsAid as conflict prevention29CorruptionReform of revenue collection30Financial InstabilityInternational solution to the currency-mismatch problem31ConflictsTransparency in natural resource rents as conflict prevention32ConflictsMilitary spending post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict33Financial InstabilityRe-regulate domestic financial markets34ConflictsShortening conflicts: Natural resource tracking35Financial InstabilityReimpose capital controls36Financial InstabilityAdopt a common currency37Subsidies and Trade BarriersFull reform: 100% liberalization38Climate ChangeOptimal carbon tax39Climate ChangeValue-at-risk carbon tax40Climate ChangeA carbon tax starting at $2 and ending at $20The Eurozone According to MerkelBRUSSELS – We had almost given up waiting for them, but then they came in a quasi-clandestine form.
In reality, the talks collapsed because nobody – not Europe, not the United States, China, India, or the other main
developing
countries – was willing to take the political short-term hit by offending inefficient farmers and coddled domestic industries in order to create greater long-term benefits for virtually everyone.
Anderson showed that if
developing
countries cut their tariffs by the same proportion as high-income countries, and services and investment were also liberalized, the annual global gains could climb to $120 billion, with $17 billion going to the world's poorest countries by 2015.
And the benefits would increasingly accrue to the
developing
world, which would achieve the biggest boosts to growth rates.
And about $2.5 trillion annually would go to today’s
developing
countries every year, or $500 a year on average for each individual in the third world, almost half of whom now survive on less than $2 a day.
Pregnancy is one of the most vulnerable times for poor women; 99% of the 529,000 women who die annually from pregnancy-related complications live in
developing
countries.
Nearly 20% of women in
developing
countries report that they would like to stop having more children but are not using any form of contraception or family planning, possibly because reproductive services are not available.
Many other countries, mainly in the
developing
world, are considering introducing nuclear power.
This surge in demand will occur at a time when finding, developing, and extracting new sources of energy and resources will be increasingly challenging and expensive.
But clean-energy costs are trending in the opposite direction, ripening these solutions at a time when need – particularly in some of the world's largest
developing
cities – is becoming acute.
If these tendencies continue,
developing
countries will probably suffer the most; but they won’t be alone.
Many
developing
countries have made progress since the 1990’s in shifting from dollar-denominated debt toward foreign direct investment and other types of capital inflows, or in paying down their liabilities altogether.
Reflecting the importance of secure land ownership to the SDGs’ success, the World Bank Group is now working with
developing
countries to improve their land-tenure systems and expand the coverage of legally recognized and registered rights.
But realizing key SDG targets – which are fully aligned with the World Bank Group’s own twin goals of ending extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity – will require a much larger investment program focused on strengthening land tenure across the
developing
world.
Since the Cold War, when it was positioned as a bulwark against Soviet expansionism, NATO has proved adept at
developing
responses to conventional threats posed by state actors.
But on December 18, 2014, the ECJ reversed its 2011 ruling, determining that an unfertilized human ovum stimulated by parthenogenesis “does not constitute a human embryo, if it does not in itself have the inherent capacity of
developing
into a human being.”
Likewise, corruption is not limited to the
developing
world, nor is it “culturally biased.”
The first step is to create a high-level forum to facilitate discussion among such stakeholders, with the goal of
developing
a cooperative strategy for reducing plastic pollution.
Such a strategy should go beyond voluntary action plans and partnerships to focus on
developing
a legally binding international agreement, underpinned by a commitment from all governments to eliminate plastic pollution.
Consider the case of shoe manufacturing in a
developing
country.
But several years of ultra-loose monetary policy in the advanced countries has led to significant liquidity spillover abroad, putting excessive upward pressure on higher-yielding
developing
countries’ currencies.
With
developing
countries finding it difficult to deter massive capital inflows or mitigate the effects – owing to economic constraints, like high inflation, or to domestic politics – the “currency wars” metaphor, coined in 2010 by Brazil’s finance minister, Guido Mantega, has resonated widely.
This is especially true in
developing
countries’ health-care systems, which often confront tighter resource constraints than health care in developed countries.
In order to have a lasting impact on health care and quality of life in the
developing
world, we need to focus on addressing the larger societal challenges that affect the overall healthcare ecosystem.
This has helped us to maintain adequate stocks, broaden access to essential medicines, and, we hope, reduce the number of malaria deaths in
developing
countries’ rural areas.
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