Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
In
developing
countries, “poor quality regulation and implementation are formidable barriers to entrepreneurship and investment,” according to a World Bank report.
As
developing
countries upgrade their regulatory systems, they should focus on closing legal gaps that put consumers at risk and undermine market credibility.
Because a regulatory institution can only be as effective as the people who work for it, another area of focus for
developing
countries should be training skilled staff.
In 2008-2011, sub-Saharan Africa received on average 4.4% of all funds invested in
developing
countries worldwide, and 3.1% of investment spending.
Similarly, half of all women of childbearing age in
developing
countries suffer from weakened immune systems, owing to anemia caused by iron deficiency.
Developing
countries will argue that their need for cheap energy to lift their people out of poverty is greater than rich countries’ need to maintain their often wasteful levels of energy consumption – and they will be right.
Yields could be increased by
developing
better crop varieties.
This makes it all the more critical that Africa begin
developing
a multi-sector, integrated approach to containing, controlling, and eventually eradicating public-health challenges like TB.
Fixing America’s campaign finance structure, which leads to massive misallocations of government funds, resuscitating America’s wildly uneven and often moribund education system, building an immigration system that actively recruits the most talented people from around the world via a fast track to US citizenship, and
developing
a national energy policy that moves the US far more quickly toward energy independence would all be important steps in this direction.
Technology and economic development are proliferating across Asia and the
developing
world, while the spread of literacy and political awareness during the past century made national self-determination by far the dominant ideology of our age, leading to the end of colonialism.
What it does not do is resolve the classical free-rider problem or guarantee reductions in
developing
countries.
A price of $1-2 per ton would generate $14-28 billion, enough to fund the deployment of the monitoring, review, and verification process in
developing
countries.
The world would be $11 trillion richer each year by 2030, with $7 trillion going to
developing
countries – equivalent to an extra $1,000 for every person every year in these countries by 2030.
In Europe, individual countries implemented divergent rules that hurt their economies and distorted competition, instead of
developing
common subsidy principles.
Little progress was made in
developing
traditional energy infrastructure linking markets.
Trading up Global Trade TalksIn the year since the breakdown of the trade talks in Cancun, sentiment has increasingly grown in the
developing
world that no agreement is better than a bad agreement.
The British Commonwealth recently posed this question to me and the Initiative for Policy Dialogue, an international network of economists committed to helping
developing
countries.
Whether or not
developing
countries benefited was of little concern.
Our second message was optimistic: if the agenda of the current round is reoriented towards development, and if assistance is provided to manage implementation and adjustment costs,
developing
countries can gain much.
We analyzed which reforms in the international trade regime would most benefit those in the
developing
world, and we presented an alternative agenda based on our findings.
The results were perhaps obvious: more people live from agriculture in the
developing
world than from manufacturing, so agricultural liberalization must be high on the agenda.
But genuinely beneficial agricultural reform would need to go further than merely transforming export subsidies into other types of subsidies, because many supposedly non-distorting subsidies lead to more output, which hurts producers in
developing
countries by lowering prices.
Trade reforms must be sensitive to the effects on
developing
countries, many of which are net importers of subsidized agricultural commodities.
Developing
countries also need access for the unskilled labor-intensive services in which they have a comparative advantage.
Developing
countries' alleged gains from capital market liberalization have been widely discussed (although recent studies raise some doubts about these benefits).
Nevertheless, the global gains from allowing freer flows of unskilled labor (even temporarily), let alone the benefits to
developing
countries, far outweigh the benefits from capital market liberalization.
Are
developing
countries really targeting this area in the next few years?
The most important competition issue for
developing
countries, however, is reform of dumping duties.
The US and EU keep out products from
developing
countries, alleging that they charge less than the cost of production.
But few
developing
countries are in a position to establish such monopoly positions, so the dumping charges are mostly bogus.
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