Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
This would make emerging markets and
developing
country members regard reserve accumulation as expensive and extravagant, thereby helping to liberate those resources to help the world economy overcome today’s crisis.
Oil-producing
developing
countries should consider whether their resources have an economic future, given diminishing scope for emissions.
Finally, it is governments of oil-importing
developing
countries that are likely to have the most urgent need for energy – and also the widest array of possibilities to meet that need.
Not only has it not recovered from its post-2008 cold; beset by multiplying crises, it is now on the verge of
developing
pneumonia.
To ensure food security for all, we will have to increase not just food production, but also availability, especially for those living in
developing
countries.
Given that Obama has a Kenyan father and has spent time in the African villages where his kin still live, it is no surprise that he understands the need for rich nations to assist
developing
nations.
For any believer in traditional European values, individual liberties – including economic freedom – and their associated responsibilities constitute the ultimate criteria for
developing
and assessing institutions, from the local to the European level.
As a result,
developing
countries face a stark choice: take advantage of new technologies to stimulate economic growth and enhance productivity or fall even further behind as businesses and consumers in rich countries increasingly embrace digital advances.
The threats and opportunities presented by new technologies for
developing
countries are widely discussed.
But the ways governments in
developing
countries exacerbate the divide through their own regulatory policies are much less well understood.
Consider the telecommunications industry in
developing
countries more generally.
The same story is true in poor countries around the world: telephone penetration remained stubbornly stagnant in
developing
nations until they allowed competitive entry-primarily in the form of mobile telephony-in the 1990's.
But governments in
developing
countries are often accustomed to controlling all aspects of their economies and tend not to want regulators to promote competition.
The bottom line is that regulatory policies in
developing
countries, particularly countries in Africa, often bear much of the responsibility for low Internet penetration and slow adoption of technology.
Institutions matter at least as much as equipment if
developing
countries hope to join the global digital economy in any meaningful way.
A regulatory framework friendly to entry by ISPs and other companies relevant to the technological infrastructure will do a lot more to bring
developing
countries into the 21st century than donations ever will.
In addition to expanding China’s cyber capabilities, Xi has also been
developing
China’s soft power through economic, social, cultural, and media initiatives.
The most important priorities include boosting the efficiency of government spending and
developing
new sources of revenue to replace oil exports.
But the most compelling reason why one should not expect a renminbi-dominated international finance system to arise anytime soon is that China’s leaders have never shown any sustained commitment to
developing
the renminbi as a true alternative to the dollar.
The IMF can play an important role in this regard, owing to its truly global perspective – one that encompasses both advanced economies and emerging and
developing
economies, which are increasingly integrating into the global financial system.
It should consider
developing
appropriate liquidity instruments to give confidence to emerging market economies that may be affected by a crisis beyond their control, rather than forcing them to build up ever-larger reserves or resort to regional arrangements for self-insurance.
In a recent interview, Obama emphasized America’s “extremely effective” participation in multilateral organizations and its role in
developing
international rules and norms as successes of his first-term foreign policy.
When the US began opening itself up to imports from Mexico, China, and other
developing
countries in the 1980s, one might have expected it to go the European route.
They projected that
developing
countries would enter the Kyoto framework at some point, and would trade their rights to emit CO2 and other greenhouse gases to the United States and Europe in return for development aid.
This has probably cost the world a decade of wasted time in
developing
a policy to deal with the problem, particularly given that intentional inaction is likely to continue until Bush’s term is finished.
First, the world’s industrial core must create incentives for the
developing
world to industrialize along an environmentally-friendly, C02- and CH4-light, path.
Slow growth of greenhouse-gas emissions in rapidly-growing economies must be accompanied by credible promises to deliver massive amounts of assistance in the mighty tasks of industrialization, education, and urbanization that China, India, Mexico, Brazil, and many other
developing
countries face.
But
developing
such standards in the cyber domain faces a number of difficult hurdles.
In other cases, such as security norms for the Internet of Things, the private sector, insurance companies, and non-profit stakeholders might take the lead in
developing
codes of conduct.
Continental Europe is becoming, and will become, more ethnically mixed as more newcomers from Eastern Europe and the
developing
world arrive.
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