Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
In contrast to Trump, Chinese President Xi Jinping has come to the defense of globalization, and made new capital available for creating global pubic goods, enhancing connectivity, and creating jobs in
developing
countries.
So, what is China’s rationale for pursuing this grandiose vision – one that so many countries, especially in the
developing
world, have embraced?
With this approach, a
developing
country can grow dynamically, and create a virtuous circle of job creation and poverty reduction, even if its overall infrastructure and business environment are still lacking.
But China’s comparative advantages in 46 of 97 subsectors – particularly in manufacturing – benefit other
developing
countries, too.
As labor costs in China rise, labor-intensive industries are relocating to lower-wage
developing
countries, providing millions of job opportunities.
In fact, China could soon become the world’s largest net creditor, and a portion of its net foreign assets will take the form of patient capital that is suitable for improving infrastructure,
developing
manufacturing sectors, and creating jobs around the world.
But this week, many activists from the
developing
world – the greatest beneficiaries of the Global Fund – will be focused on efforts to keep the institution viable as it passes the ten-year mark.
After years of structural adjustment programs, the health-care systems of many
developing
countries – especially in Africa – had been ravaged, with 30-50% vacancy rates in health-care positions, bare dispensaries, and never-ending queues.
The Global Fund board’s governance structure is as innovative as its approach to funding, comprising donors, people affected by the target diseases, civil-society organizations from developed and
developing
countries, and governments.
As a percentage of GDP, China’s tax revenues amount to about 18% – compared to around 26% of GDP in developed countries and around 20% in
developing
countries (in 2013) – and continues to decline.
Such policies embody a country’s choice in
developing
one or several sports.
All of us involved in the campaign will work toward
developing
concrete solutions to the root causes of the homicide epidemic.
Furthermore,
developing
economies are now contributing to a burgeoning global middle class, whose numbers have more than doubled, from around one billion people in 1985 to 2.3 billion in 2015.
But, as is often the case with natural-resource exploitation in
developing
countries – though not necessarily in Chile – the process has turned into a tragicomedy of errors, impeding the country’s development.
The good news is that some innovative companies are already
developing
new business models that address the underlying market failure.
Obama’s election has raised hopes for a massive commitment to carbon cuts and vast spending on renewable energy to save the world – especially
developing
nations.
According to this “law” – which is now conventional wisdom – industrialization is the only route to rapid economic development for
developing
countries.
Developing
countries can thus sustain service-led growth, given the huge room they have for catch-up and convergence.
The globalization of services, however, provides alternative opportunities for
developing
countries to find niches, beyond manufacturing, where they can specialize, scale up, and achieve explosive growth, just like the industrializers.
At the same time, as Europe’s largest consumer of Russian gas, Germany has built its hopes for energy security on
developing
a rich web of economic ties with Russia.
Technological support for Iran’s nuclear programs could impede the ongoing international negotiations aimed at preventing Iran from
developing
nuclear weapons, especially as the Iranians are looking for leverage in the talks.
Global warming will mainly harm
developing
countries, because they are poorer and therefore more vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
However, even the most pessimistic forecasts from the UN project that by 2100 the average person in
developing
countries will be richer than the average person in developed countries is now.
It would involve all nations, with richer nations naturally paying the larger share, and perhaps
developing
nations being phased in.
The rapidly
developing
nanomaterials industry is the nanotechnology that is most likely to affect our lives first.
In recent years, a series of extreme weather events – including Hurricane Sandy in New York and New Jersey, floods in China, and droughts in the American Midwest, Russia, and many
developing
countries – have caused immense damage.
Today, these policies are contributing to an explosion of HIV infections in much of the
developing
world.
Natural resources are a major potential source of wealth for
developing
countries; in 2010, the total value of mineral and fuel exports from Asia, Africa, and South and Central America was roughly 15 times higher than the aid that they received.
After all, what
developing
country with its citizens’ long-term interests in mind will be prepared to issue bonds through the US financial system, when America’s courts – as so many other parts of its political system – seem to allow financial interests to trump the public interest?
For those in
developing
and emerging-market countries who harbor grievances against the advanced countries, there is now one more reason for discontent with a brand of globalization that has been managed to serve rich countries’ interests (especially their financial sectors’ interests).
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