Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
In the coming years, China’s engagement with the
developing
world will continue to deepen.
The National People’s Congress has discussed using a portion of China’s foreign-exchange reserves to finance infrastructure projects in
developing
countries.
Such a Chinese “Marshall Plan” could seek to strengthen
developing
countries’ capacity to absorb Chinese goods, or it could advance a broader development agenda.
As open economies, Belgium and the Netherlands have both been interested in
developing
the internal market, while differing in their methods.
Warning: Hospitals May be Unsafe for the PoorMost public health initiatives in
developing
countries focus on controlling infectious diseases in the community.
Developing
nations lavish their limited resources on hospitals, which consume more than 50% of healthcare budgets in many poor countries.
On one occasion, my colleagues and I were invited to a public hospital in a
developing
country to investigate why the death rate in a pediatric ICU caring for patients with dengue hemorrhagic fever was so high.
If not, many investments in costly hospital facilities in the
developing
world may do more harm than good.
This correlation is reinforced by the convergence hypothesis – the benchmark theory for estimating an economy’s potential growth rate – which states that a rapidly growing
developing
economy’s real growth rate will slow when it reaches a certain share of the per capita capital stock and income of an advanced economy.
Nowhere does this question loom larger than in
developing
and emerging economies, which are outside the main theater of the crisis, but are more precariously positioned than the advanced countries.
Until 2015, the outlook is gloomy for Europe and, by extension, for the emerging and
developing
economies.
Where does that leave
developing
countries?
Then panic spread to credit markets, money markets, and currency markets, highlighting the vulnerabilities of many
developing
countries’ financial systems and corporate sectors, which had experienced credit booms and had borrowed short and in foreign currencies.
Harvard’s Jeffrey Frankel fears a “possible repeat of previous episodes, notably in 1982 and 1994, when the Fed’s policy tightening helped precipitate financial crises in
developing
countries.”
Similarly, the euro-collapse scenario in which such countries successfully pressure the ECB to inflate, compelling Germany to abandon the euro, has shown no signs of
developing.
The world's richest individuals, 225 of them, have the combined wealth of over $1 trillion and of the 4.4 billion people in
developing
countries 3/5 lack access to safe sewers, 1/3 have no access to clean water, and 1/5 have no access to medical services.
One assessment estimates that about $40 billion a year will be needed to halve rates of deforestation and ensure sustainable management of forests in
developing
countries by the target date.
Forests ensure water supplies, counter soil erosion, and safeguard an abundance of genetic resources that will become increasingly important in
developing
the new products, pharmaceuticals, and crop strains needed to support the lives and livelihoods of more than nine billion people by 2050.
The UN-REDD Program, launched in 2008, currently supports 44
developing
countries, with 16 countries receiving direct financial and technical support.
But, most exciting of all, Ghana’s program offers a blueprint for how other
developing
countries can expand their own health-care access.
Indeed, the growing gap between the promise and the reality of health care has created room – in developed and
developing
countries alike – for new players who are concerned more with social behavior than with biology.
A new model was needed not only to escape such pitfalls, but also to avoid the dreaded “middle-income trap” that ensnares most fast-growing
developing
economies when they reach income thresholds that China was rapidly approaching.
Nowadays, no country can evolve without
developing
effective and credible institutions, establishing a meaningful system of political checks and balances, and diffusing control over decision-making.
After so much time and effort
developing
a nuclear deterrent, he was never going to give it up easily.
Europe’s agricultural protectionism also harms
developing
countries, which are unable to sell their agricultural products – in many cases, the only goods they can export – in European markets.
According to an older studyby the Canadian economist John Whalley, the disadvantages of agricultural protectionism for
developing
countries outweigh the benefits of development aid.
That means studying how Chinese law is
developing
and being deployed in the protection of rights, and creating opportunities to interact with those who are at the forefront of these movements in all areas of law.
Erhard even attempted to adjust it to the sociopolitical changes of the 1960s,
developing
the concept of a “formed society," whereby factionalism would be minimized and the state governed by consensus.
Among
developing
countries, Latin America’s share of global FDI also fell dramatically, from 40-50% in the 1970’s to about half that in 2006.
In all countries – but especially in
developing
economies – a robust regulatory system is essential to building trust in the marketplace.
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