Domestic
in sentence
5631 examples of Domestic in a sentence
But the US government has always regarded them as
domestic
American issues rather than as key foreign-policy concerns.
As the report noted, it is difficult to understand why small countries maintain high tariffs on health products – a move that serves only to drive up
domestic
prices.
Unfortunately, Germany’s
domestic
politics just got trickier.
As this requires some fundamental
domestic
re-alignments, the rebalancing will be both gradual and non-linear at times.
What these examples show is that
domestic
efforts trump everything else in determining a country’s economic fortunes.
With none of Mexico’s advantages, Vietnam pursued a strategy that focused on diversifying its economy and enhancing the productive capacity of
domestic
suppliers.
Broader post-war experience supports the conclusion that
domestic
policies are what matter most.
The AfDB’s Trade Finance Program, established in February 2013, has so far supported more than 85
domestic
banks in 27 African countries, catalyzing approximately $3.4 billion in trade in vital sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing and construction, and energy.
In foreign-policy terms, China will attempt to protect its
domestic
transformation by securing resources and access to foreign markets.
In every case, voters said, “no” – outcomes that can be blamed, particularly in the UK, on national leaders’ habit of blaming the EU for
domestic
problems.
Membership in the same monetary zone as Germany will condemn these countries to years of deflation, high unemployment, and
domestic
political turmoil.
List of priorities, outcome document from Copenhagen Consensus by UN ambassadors, June 16-17 2006 at Georgetown University:challengeopportunity1Communicable DiseasesScaled-up basic health services2Sanitation and WaterCommunity-managed water supply and sanitation3EducationPhysical expansion4Malnutrition and HungerImproving infant and child nutrition5Malnutrition and HungerInvestment in technology in developing country agriculture6Communicable DiseasesControl of HIV/AIDS7Communicable DiseasesControl of malaria8Malnutrition and HungerReducing micro nutrient deficiencies9Subsidies and Trade BarriersOptimistic Doha: 50% liberalization10EducationImprove quality / Systemic reforms11Sanitation and WaterSmall-scale water technology for livelihoods12EducationExpand demand for schooling13Malnutrition and HungerReducing Low Birth Weight for high risk pregnancies14EducationReductions in the cost of schooling to increase demand15Sanitation and WaterResearch to increase water productivity in food production16MigrationMigration for development17CorruptionProcurement reform18ConflictsAid post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict19Sanitation and WaterRe-using waste water for agriculture20MigrationGuest worker policies21Sanitation and WaterSustainable food and fish production in wetlands22CorruptionGrassroots monitoring and service delivery23CorruptionTechnical assistance to develop monitoring and transparency initiatives24MigrationActive immigration policies25Subsidies and Trade BarriersPessimistic Doha: 25% liberalization26CorruptionReduction in the state-imposed costs of business/government relations27Climate ChangeThe Kyoto Protocol28ConflictsAid as conflict prevention29CorruptionReform of revenue collection30Financial InstabilityInternational solution to the currency-mismatch problem31ConflictsTransparency in natural resource rents as conflict prevention32ConflictsMilitary spending post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict33Financial InstabilityRe-regulate
domestic
financial markets34ConflictsShortening conflicts: Natural resource tracking35Financial InstabilityReimpose capital controls36Financial InstabilityAdopt a common currency37Subsidies and Trade BarriersFull reform: 100% liberalization38Climate ChangeOptimal carbon tax39Climate ChangeValue-at-risk carbon tax40Climate ChangeA carbon tax starting at $2 and ending at $20The Eurozone According to MerkelBRUSSELS – We had almost given up waiting for them, but then they came in a quasi-clandestine form.
In reality, the talks collapsed because nobody – not Europe, not the United States, China, India, or the other main developing countries – was willing to take the political short-term hit by offending inefficient farmers and coddled
domestic
industries in order to create greater long-term benefits for virtually everyone.
The sharp rise in
domestic
interest rates was necessary not only to stabilize the currency, but also to make it attractive for investors to roll over large amounts of peso bonds coming due in early May.
One bit of good news is that rollover risk on
domestic
bonds is not nearly as high as some newspaper headlines have suggested, because the lion’s share is held by local banks and public-sector entities that have large and stable liquidity needs.
With
domestic
spending subdued, they have been relying on exports.
The fact that May is facing the weakest
domestic
opposition imaginable may actually compound her difficulties.
On the positive side, it is likely to produce the political cohesion needed to implement structural reforms that shift the economy away from trade and manufacturing and toward
domestic
consumption.
Even as China raises tariffs on US imports, it is lowering tariffs for other countries, in order to fulfill its promise to increase overall imports and bolster
domestic
consumption.
America’s
domestic
narrative soon overcame its foreign-policy setbacks, thanks partly to today’s unprecedented connectivity.
In such an information age, Nye wrote, three types of countries are likely to gain soft power: “those whose dominant cultures and ideals are closer to prevailing global norms (which now emphasize liberalism, pluralism, autonomy); those with the most access to multiple channels of communication and thus more influence over how issues are framed; and those whose credibility is enhanced by their
domestic
and international performance.”
Indeed, America’s culture and ideals set the bar for others, and its international credibility rested on its
domestic
arrangements.
China also has major advantages in terms of
domestic
politics and international diplomacy.
Many in Britain know exactly what they want: to impose controls on the movement of workers from the rest of the EU, thereby protecting the
domestic
labor market, but without losing access to the single market or passporting rights, which allow British firms to sell their financial services on the continent.
Doing nothing means allowing US investment funds to pursue enormous compensation cases – likely in the billions of dollars – against a future Ukrainian administration, which, even in the best-case scenario, will be on weak
domestic
political footing and already saddled with an unpopular austerity program and loan-repayment schedule.
First, India has considerable resources of its own to put towards growth, and has proven itself skilled at the art of channelling
domestic
savings into productive investments.
By bad politics, I mean the xenophobic nationalism and suppression of
domestic
civil liberties seen in countries with populist governments.
To keep money coming, he shortened the maturity of
domestic
and foreign liabilities; to keep the music going he gave state governments leeway to spend money they didn't have.
The maturity of
domestic
debt is very short, of external debt even shorter.
With capital flight intensifying and
domestic
debt refinancing becoming ever harder, its a short step to capital controls and, perhaps, an uncontrolled currency problem.
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