Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
Adopting children from
developing
countries does not address the causes of poverty.
Despite the high rate of HIV/AIDS infections, Malawi’s population, like that of many
developing
nations, is growing rapidly.
In the wake of WWII, the US, motivated partly by the Cold War, helped to create the old order by facilitating economic recovery in the West and, over time, creating growth opportunities for
developing
countries.
Meanwhile, for
developing
countries that lack China’s economic might, the trend away from multilateralism could hurt.
Today, cancer kills more people in
developing
countries than AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis combined.
Estimates of the amounts needed by
developing
countries to help them adapt to these challenges vary between $50 and $100 billion per year.
In parallel, colonialism collapsed, and we are now slightly more than halfway through a century-long process of modernization for the many
developing
countries that emerged.
With formal barriers to trade and capital flows lowered, several trends combined to accelerate growth and structural change in post-colonial and other
developing
economies.
Thus, in the early post-war period,
developing
countries, whose exports had previously consisted mainly of natural resources and agricultural products, expanded into labor-intensive manufacturing.
Although the shifting structure of the global economy is best described as a journey taken only once, growth in
developing
countries does exhibit repeating patterns.
The aggregate size of the
developing
countries (especially the major emerging economies), their rising incomes, and their ongoing movement up the value chain are having a growing impact on advanced-country economies, particularly these economies’ tradable sectors.
However,
developing
and exploiting the full array of potential new disease-fighting weapons will require outstanding scientists and engineers, including those with interdisciplinary training.
In much the same way that cigarette companies shifted their focus to the
developing
world when regulators clamped down on their marketing practices in America, fast-food companies seem to be trying to capitalize on those portions of the global consumer base that have little exposure to health campaigns in their native languages.
But, as the British newspaper The Guardian assured readers, this was a breakthrough, because
developing
countries, including India and China, were, for the first time, “agreeing to be legally bound to curb their greenhouse gases.”
Of course, English is
developing
into a lingua franca.
This division of jobs leaves out the
developing
countries, many of which are
"developing"
at a speed that will make them richer than Europe in per capita terms quite soon.
The over-representation of Western Europe and the under-representation of growing
developing
countries cannot last.
Around 60 other countries – most of them in the
developing
world – have informed the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that they are interested in introducing nuclear power.
The
developing
world desperately needs access to electricity to help lift people out of poverty and ensure sustainable development.
In particular, member states will need to think much more radically about
developing
a strong EU foreign and security policy, for two reasons.
To this end, China has been
developing
anti-satellite weapons, conventional ballistic missiles, long-range precision cruise missiles, electronic and cyber-warfare capabilities, submarines, surface combat vessels, multi-role combat aircraft, and advanced integrated air, missile, and early-warning defense systems.
The implication is clear: Central banks should focus on
developing
more effective macro-prudential instruments.
As Columbia’s Xavier Sala-i-Martin pointed out in 2002 and 2006, even as inequality has risen in nearly every country, inequality across countries has decreased, owing largely to the success of
developing
countries like China and India in raising their per capita incomes since the 1980s.
But, if one uses geography to isolate exogenous determinants of trade, it becomes apparent that trade has been among the most powerful drivers of Asia’s economic success, and thus the convergence between the developed and
developing
worlds.
“There is overwhelming evidence,” they write, “that less-skilled workers in
developing
countries “are generally not better off, at least not relative to workers with higher skill or education levels.”
Ten years later, inequality continues to worsen within
developing
countries, including the so-called BRICS emerging economies.
Developing
effective peer-to-peer payments that require no financial intermediary like a bank will be crucial for ensuring that digital platforms for ride sharing, on-demand tasks, and other services can thrive.
The safe bet is that we will not see a return to the kind of growth that the world – especially the
developing
world – experienced in the two decades before the financial crisis.
The supply-side problem faced by
developing
countries is more debilitating.
We see the consequences in the “premature deindustrialization” of the
developing
world today.
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