Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
In engineering that shift, leaders should focus on
developing
the four pillars of a knowledge economy, as defined by the World Bank’s Knowledge Economy Index.
That is not only unnecessary; it is economically damaging to Europe and
developing
countries alike.
Fourth, the combination of a dollar squeeze and protectionism spells big trouble for
developing
countries, with the possible exception of some relatively closed economies such as Brazil, Russia, and India, whose development strategies are less reliant on free trade and foreign financing.
Israel’s Missing Peace OffensiveTEL AVIV – Even before the latest cease-fire took hold, it had become clear that the dilemma facing Israel in Gaza entails more than simply
developing
military answers to the challenge posed by Hamas.
Poor countries, especially the democracies of the
developing
world--Brazil, South Africa, India, Mexico, Ghana, the Philippines--should say, "We need to act on the issues that concern us, not just on the issues that concern the US."
The report lays out the available options for mobilizing $100 billion annually for climate-change mitigation and adaptation in
developing
countries, and establishes the conditions that would make it possible to achieve this goal by 2020.
The MDBs have been able to leverage large flows of private investment by mitigating risks and
developing
the capacity of domestic financial institutions.
The GET FiT program is a proposal to promote access to renewable energy in the
developing
world through new public-private partnerships.
People in the US suffer from over-prescription of opioids while people in
developing
countries are often suffering because of under-prescription.
Policymakers in the
developing
world are making a choice to impose what the WHO calls “overly restrictive regulations” on morphine and other essential palliative medicines.
Plummer’s case thus highlights a broader misfortune: that so many citizens of
developing
countries are denied effective pain relief by governments in the grip of opiophobia.
But
developing
their financial markets would allow the private sector to tap the GCC’s plentiful financial resources invested outside the Gulf.
This is especially true in
developing
countries, where it is common to find differences in productivity of a factor of ten at the provincial or state level and many times higher at the municipal level.
This complementarity makes many parts of the
developing
world unsuitable for modern production, because key inputs are missing.
The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates that 90 million children between eight and fifteen years old work in the labor forces of
developing
countries; worldwide the figure is higher.
Because child labor means cheap labor, the young are often the most employable in
developing
and recession-plagued economies.
The agricultural sector--the largest employer of children in both
developing
and industrialized countries--is particularly difficult to oversee.
A recent study by UNESCO shows that in
developing
countries up to 60% of children do not complete primary school.
So why are an increasing number of
developing
countries resorting to sovereign-bond issues?
Sub-Saharan Africa’s economies, one hopes, will not have to repeat the costly lessons that other
developing
countries have learned over the past three decades.
Led by China and India,
developing
countries were prominent among the best performing economies, expanding by 6.5% on average in 2006.
This lifted manufactured exports around the world and kept inflation down, which in turn boosted demand for energy and raw materials from the
developing
world, pushing up commodity prices and benefiting many poor countries.
The build-up of official reserves in East Asia and other
developing
countries will provide them with extra means to deal with possible external shocks.
Existing platforms, such as the G-8 summits, are unsuitable to achieve this course of action, mainly because key players from the
developing
world are not included.
To be credible as a mediator of this mechanism, the IMF itself would need reform, including a substantial change of voting power to bring the influence of
developing
countries in line with the weight they carry nowadays in the global economy.
Such reforms should work towards
developing
a multilaterally agreed multi-currency reserve system or even, in the longer term, a world currency based on the Special Drawing Rights issued by the IMF.
TOKYO – The US Federal Reserve’s gradual exit from so-called quantitative easing (QE) – open-ended purchases of long-term assets – has financial markets and policymakers worried, with warnings of capital flight from
developing
economies and collapsing asset prices dominating policy discussions worldwide.
Over my lifetime, I have been fortunate to witness the extraordinary impact that vaccines have had on protecting children from illness and death – especially in the
developing
world.
He then urged lower barriers to agricultural exports to help the poor in
developing
countries.
First, the standard narrative about how trade has benefited
developing
economies omits a crucial feature of their experience.
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