Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
Indeed, China’s dilemma is emblematic of one of
developing
Asia’s greatest challenges: the need to tilt the growth model away from external toward internal demand.
Led by China, the high-flying economies of
developing
Asia are increasingly viewed as the new and powerful engines of a multi-speed world.
Indeed, roughly one-third of migrants nowadays move between developed countries; one-third move between
developing
countries; and only one-third move from the
developing
to the developed world.
These child brides are forced into sexual activity when their bodies are still developing, and most lack the knowledge, confidence, and power to negotiate safe sex.
For decades,
developing
countries dreamed of a nirvana of sky-high commodity prices and rock-bottom international interest rates.
But these favorable net benefits reflect very conservative assumptions regarding the timing of emissions reductions and when the
developing
world would “come onboard.”
Failure would thus constitute a serious indictment of political leaders in major trading countries in both the developed and
developing
worlds, possibly costing the global economy $700 billion in additional annual income.
While large
developing
countries – such as Brazil, Russia, India, and China – can avoid such impositions from developed economies, most others cannot.
Provisions for a minimum of A$15 are also in preparation, in order to insulate Australia’s market from the fire-sale prices of A$5 or less for which emissions-reduction credits from
developing
countries can be bought.
If you learned you had a high chance of
developing
Alzheimer’s in a few years, what would you do?
Stunted children don’t just fail to thrive physically; they also fall behind their better-fed peers in
developing
cognitive skills.
The areas where this new and old left can make a difference include improving anti-poverty programs, expanding housing and property rights, effective land reform,
developing
education, science, and technology, and, perhaps most importantly, strengthening democracy, human rights, and the rule of law in a region where they have been woefully absent for decades.
Serving Two MastersTalk about corruption in
developing
countries -- and in some developed ones -- is running rampant.
In the past, corruption was usually said to be located within the ranks of public servants, and this was used as a partial justification for privatization, especially in
developing
countries.
They must turn to the IMF, and the IMF is more concerned with international financial stability than with enabling
developing
countries to pursue the countercyclical policies needed to avoid recession.
Private health insurance has proved enormously wasteful, with large administrative expenditures on activities that include
developing
insurance packages, marketing those packages, and assessing claims.
The World Bank estimates that recent food-price increases have driven an additional 44 million people in
developing
countries into poverty.
The problem is exacerbated by the significant drop in official development assistance for agricultural development in
developing
countries.
With cuts continuing, agricultural research and development – needed to improve crop productivity – has fallen for all crops in all
developing
countries.
Meanwhile, rich countries continue to subsidize and protect their farmers, thereby undermining food production in
developing
countries.
Viewed in this way, an essential policy that developed and
developing
countries should pursue in overcoming the crisis is to build infrastructure suitable for the twenty-first century.
In practice, the global crisis means that sustainable investments are being curtailed rather than expanded in the
developing
world.
As access to international bank loans, bond flotations, and foreign direct investment is lost, infrastructure projects talked about in the past are now being shelved, threatening the political and economic stability of dozens of
developing
countries.
Moreover, policymakers in the rich world believe that they can continue to neglect the
developing
world, or leave it to its fate in global markets.
Developed countries should agree to channel considerable savings to
developing
countries to finance the scale-up of sustainable investments.
Developed countries also fail to recognize that without much greater financing of sustainable infrastructure in the
developing
world – especially sustainable power generation and transmission – a global agreement on climate change later this year (or any time soon) will be impossible.
It ranks among the great ironies of history that these two brilliant men, credited with saving millions from starvation, are also infamous for other work done later: Haber, a German Jew, was a central force in
developing
poison gas in World War I (and also performed research that led to the Zyklon B poison gas later used in concentration camps);Bosch, an ardent anti-Nazi, founded the giant chemical company I.G.
Creating enough jobs that fast would be hard enough in the best of times; when so many of them must be concentrated in fast-growing urban hubs in
developing
countries, the potential for lapses is high, with serious implications for poverty reduction, economic development, and even social stability.
As a result, the current financial crisis is less likely to cause a global recession than a radical realignment of the global economy, with a relative decline of the US and the rise of China and other
developing
countries.
Second, we need a global agreement on a mechanism to raise and channel sufficient and predictable financial support and to accelerate technology transfer to
developing
countries, especially in Africa.
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