Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
In addition to the prospect of enormous human suffering, severe economic, political, and social pressures now threaten to overwhelm and destabilize
developing
countries, triggering conflict on an unprecedented scale.
Every minute that passes means one less mother, and it is shameful that 99% of these deaths occur in
developing
countries.
Will
developing
countries be left behind?
On its face, this shift to digital globalization would seem to work against
developing
countries that have large pools of low-cost labor but inadequate infrastructure and education systems.
Yet digital flows offer
developing
countries new ways of engaging with the global economy.
Companies based in
developing
countries can overcome local market constraints and connect with customers, suppliers, financing, and talent worldwide.
Digital connections promote productivity growth; indeed, they can help
developing
economies move to the productivity frontier by exposing their business sectors to ideas, research, technologies, and best management and operational practices, and by building new channels to serve large global markets.
The good news is that a new pattern of citizen participation is emerging, especially in
developing
countries, with new voices and fresh ideas entering the debate.
Much of this urban growth will occur in
developing
countries, especially in Africa.
Chile has set a positive precedent in the
developing
world by carrying out extensive consultations on its national climate commitment for Paris.
But, while some countries have managed to take advantage of the current regulatory environment to advance their own digital capabilities, many
developing
countries risk being left behind.
Many
developing
countries agreed to liberalize cross-border delivery of services (so-called “mode one” trade), never anticipating just how dramatically the digital economy would revolutionize cross-border economic opportunities and enable more services to be delivered across borders.
Today, these earlier commitments are becoming economically meaningful, increasing the pressure on many
developing
countries.
So far, regulatory ambiguity has not severely affected
developing
countries, and the economic costs to the global South have been minimal.
In such a scenario, the pressure on
developing
countries to accept digital rules would intensify.
Proponents of new rules could advise
developing
countries to accept them openly, arguing that to operate outside a global regulatory system would hurt domestic digital development and make it difficult to participate in new technological fields.
In multilateral and bilateral agreements,
developing
countries accept restrictions on their “policy space” in exchange for better market access to advanced economies.
Many scholars now believe this “bargain” undermines
developing
countries’ ability to enact policies that encourage economic diversification and structural change, making it more difficult for them to catch up economically and technologically with developed economies.
To be sure, international institutions and many
developing
countries have invested significantly in improving data collection to track better their performance against MDG targets.
But development data remain a scarce resource in the
developing
world.
Increasing the quantity, quality, availability, and usability of data for development requires addressing the market failures that lead to gaps in data use and coverage in
developing
countries.
Why, then, does the message resonate far beyond the United States, and even the advanced economies, to include workers in many of the
developing
countries that are typically portrayed as globalization’s main beneficiaries?
The upshot of this system is that many
developing
countries that should have benefited from the globalization of value chains have remained confined to low-productivity activities that yield only limited economic value and do not even foster wider technological upgrading.
UNCTAD’s research also shows that, for both developed and
developing
countries, integration into global value chains correlates with declining shares of domestic value-added in exports.
For another, it prevents
developing
countries from reaping the full benefits of rising commodity prices, though they gain no protection from price downturns.
That great staple of political rhetoric appears to have been buried across the
developing
world.
Developing
a new Euro-Atlantic strategy for the Black Sea region must start with the democracies of North America and Europe recognizing their moral and political stake in the outcome.
As for generic producers, the AMF’s scoring of pollution could prove most important, given that many of these companies operate in
developing
countries where environmental degradation is a major concern.
The EU, despite much talking, has not come close to
developing
a common defense policy.
Why couldn’t the Fund do the same thing for central banks from
developing
countries and emerging economies?
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