Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
Type-2 diabetes not only renders the body incapable of processing or responding to insulin; it also weakens the immune system, increasing its victims’ risk of
developing
active TB.
Elsewhere, in the
developing
world, popular mobilization occurred in the absence of a liberal tradition or liberal practices.
Professors at the top universities distinguish themselves today not by being right about the real world, but by devising imaginative theoretical twists or
developing
novel evidence.
These range from improving information about grain stocks and
developing
better weather-forecasting methods to strengthening social safety nets for the poor and helping small farmers benefit from tenders from humanitarian purchasers such as the World Food Program.
This trend must be reversed by allowing
developing
countries to support their farmers and, where domestic supply is sufficient, protect them from dumping by foreign producers.
Fourth, many cash-strapped
developing
countries fear that social safety nets, once put in place, may become fiscally unsustainable, owing to a sudden loss of export revenue, poor harvests, or sharp increases in prices for food imports.
This $1.90 threshold for extreme poverty is a really tight limit: it is not what a wealthy tourist could buy in a low-cost,
developing
country.
The 2012 study demonstrated that an investment of just $100 per child could pay for a bundle of interventions – including micronutrients, diet-quality improvements, and behavior-change programs – that would reduce chronic undernutrition in
developing
countries by 36%.
Finally, greater attention is being paid to
developing
a pan-African identity, and African fashions, films, and foods are expanding to new markets.
One successful UNESCO initiative is the creation of multipurpose community telecenters throughout the
developing
world, providing communication and information facilities – phone, fax, Internet, computers, audio-visual equipment – for a wide range of community uses.
On the contrary, the technology gap between developed and
developing
countries, measured by levels of penetration by personal computers and information-technology and communications services, has narrowed markedly over the course of the past decade, with rapid growth in mobile phone and Internet use.
The average level of Internet and mobile-phone penetration in the rich world in 1997 – 4.1 Internet users and 10.7 mobile phones per 100 inhabitants – was reached in
developing
countries only five years later.
By contrast, the average level of fixed-line telecommunication penetration in
developing
countries is nearly 50 years behind the levels of the West.
How to Reform the IMF NowWASHINGTON, DC – More than four years have passed since an overwhelming majority of the membership of the International Monetary Fund agreed to a package of reforms that would double the organization’s resources and reorganize its governing structure in favor of
developing
countries.
It stands in the way of a restructuring of its decision-making process that would better reflect
developing
countries’ growing importance and dynamism.
This change would double the IMF’s resources and provide greater voting power to
developing
countries.
Tackling Non-Inclusive GrowthMILAN – Several years ago, I had the privilege of chairing a commission on growth in
developing
countries.
Its members had significant economic, political, and social policymaking experience in the
developing
world, and despite their differences, they all agreed on certain crucial points.
Many
developing
countries have experienced extended periods of slow or no growth.
In this respect,
developing
countries’ experience holds potentially important lessons for policymakers and various stakeholders in advanced economies.
But I would remind them of the second lesson from
developing
countries’ experience: non-inclusive growth patterns undermine trust and eventually governance, in turn undercutting policymakers’ ability to sustain policies and strategies that support high growth.
Three-quarters of the elderly will be living in what are now
developing
countries, and the majority of them will be women.
The third coalition should comprise
developing
countries taking advantage of gains in energy security, equity, and sustainability to leapfrog into new energy pathways, much as they took advantage of mobile telephony.
Such South-South cooperation – supported by German, Norwegian, and Danish technological prowess – can help other
developing
countries to join the energy Internet.
While developed countries, including the US and the United Kingdom, have drawn on their allocations, the major users have been
developing
and, in particular, low-income countries.
In fact, this is the only way in which
developing
countries (China aside) share in the creation of international money.
To address
developing
countries’ high currency demands, while enhancing their role in the creation of international money, a formula could be created to give them a larger share in SDR allocations than they now receive.
In the
developing
world, the share of the long-term unemployed continues to increase, reaching 40% in many countries, notably the US, the United Kingdom, and the debt-distressed eurozone members.
As the crisis deepens, even those
developing
countries that weathered the storm far better than most developed countries are showing signs of strain.
After all, for three decades prior to the crisis,
developing
countries were told to liberalize, and to pursue export-oriented policies, leaving them structurally dependent on advanced-country demand, which remains weak.
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