Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
The economist Tyler Cowen has suggested that
developing
countries may benefit from the trickle-down of innovation from the advanced economies: they can consume a stream of new products at cheap prices.
Lendico, and RainFin have proved popular, and could re-energize the microfinance community and provide wider access to loans for SMEs in
developing
countries.
In addition, the regime is
developing
intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of carrying a nuclear warhead and reaching the West Coast of the US, or farther.
Just as Europe’s population is aging and will be shrinking, that of much of the
developing
world is young and growing.
By 2050 the population of the 50 least developed countries is projected to double, and while the ratio of working-age to non-working-age people in Europe will fall to around 1.4, in the
developing
world it will be considerably higher.
Countries in most
developing
regions, such as Latin America, North Africa, the Middle East, and much of Asia, may be able to absorb their armies of potential workers into productive employment and benefit appreciably from the ensuing economic boost.
Migration from Africa and other
developing
regions to Europe is already increasing; as populations in poor countries grow, the number of would-be migrants will multiply.
Likewise, efforts to help
developing
countries create jobs and improve quality of life will reduce irregular migration and help avert its social costs.
The battle to keep the world's cities – and thus the global economy – both dynamic and sustainable can be won by
developing
innovative ways to consume our limited resources, without diminishing them or degrading the delicate ecological systems on which they depend.
Moreover, the transport sector accounted for 23% of all energy-related CO2 emissions in 2004, and it is the fastest growing source of emissions in
developing
countries.
Innovative firms face the uphill challenge of
developing
entire new products and selling them in geographically and economically distant markets.
Indeed, as part of their claimed desire to protect the nation’s sovereignty, governments in
developing
and emerging countries now regard cash transfers from rich countries for, say, democratization processes, with far more suspicion than they did in the 1990s.
Rather, the Fund’s role, even in the current crisis, should be sharpened as an interlocutor between lenders and
developing
country borrowers, rather than simply as a replacement for all other loan sources.
Rich country governments, led by central banks, should provide the large scale funding needed to stem the run on
developing
country finances.
In the short run, the IMF could help coordinate additional loans from countries such as the US, Japan, and China, to help maintain economic and political stability in the
developing
world.
Beyond building bridges and creating gadgets, engineers can help improve the quality and affordability of health care around the world, by
developing
faster methods for diagnosing diseases and delivering medical services.
Moreover, faculty, students, researchers, and practitioners who have an interest in
developing
appropriate solutions to global health problems should be afforded the opportunity to do so.
And at my institution, Boston University, we research ways to improve the quality and practice of medicine in the
developing
world.
In parallel, the European Banking Authority will continue to perform its existing tasks, namely
developing
the single rulebook for the entire single market and ensuring convergent supervisory practice throughout the EU.
If we want them to make products that will help the poor in
developing
countries, we need to find ways of giving them – and their shareholders – a return on their investment.
Whereas pharmaceutical companies lack incentives to aid the poor in
developing
countries, they have strong incentives to develop products for people in affluent countries.
Given that most of the lives saved are those of children, who even in
developing
countries have a life expectancy of at least 50 years, this equates to a cost of $68 per year of life saved.
Should we really be valuing the life of a person in an affluent country at more than 6,000 times the value of the life of an impoverished child in a
developing
country?
The share is even larger in much of the
developing
world.
This sense of disempowerment is threatening to turn the
developing
world’s youth bulge into a youth curse – with serious potential consequences.
Saving Resources to Save GrowthNEW YORK – Reconciling global economic growth, especially in
developing
countries, with the intensifying constraints on global supplies of energy, food, land, and water is the great question of our time.
The rich world should commit to financing a massive program of technology development – renewable energy, fuel-efficient cars, and green buildings – and to a program of technology transfer to
developing
countries.
With Bangladesh unable to pick up the slack, life-saving projects like ours will collapse; the long-term resources we have developed, from the insectarium to new diagnostic devices, will have to be abandoned; and the
developing
world’s poorest communities will suffer.
It subsequently became popular in Latin America (Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Colombia, and Peru) and among other
developing
countries (including South Africa, South Korea, Indonesia, Thailand, and Turkey).
But this is hardly a trivial development for low-income families in the
developing
world, where the share of foodstuffs in household budgets – 46% in India and 33% in China – is 2-3 times the ratio in developed countries.
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