Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
During the 1990s and 2000s, I repeatedly asked senior Japanese finance ministry officials why they allowed the yen’s real appreciation to persist, thereby shutting down
export
growth.
Yet, as Figure 4 shows, the real appreciation led to a rapid collapse of China’s annual
export
growth, from above 15% (smoothed over three-year intervals) to elow 10%, and now to a financial slump as well.
Instead, we should map out a forward-looking plan based on reasonable assumptions about the primary surpluses consistent with the rates of output growth, net investment, and
export
expansion that can stabilize Greece’s economy and debt ratio.
The best evidence of this failure is that, despite a huge drop in wages and costs,
export
growth has been flat (the elimination of the current-account deficit being due exclusively to the collapse of imports).
But “US efforts to get China to shed these objectives sound hypocritical when the United States seems to be opting for excess stimulus itself....[I]f the People’s Bank and the Fed tightened in coordination with most central banks, domestic [Chinese] concerns about competitive depreciation would be muted...”China’s policy of
export
subsidies through currency manipulation was always bound to become unsustainable in the long run because it was bound to generate substantial domestic inflation.
This tends to undermine German growth and benefit southern European countries, which
export
more consumer goods.
With a democratic transition and an economy primed for growth on the basis of inward investments into Mexico and an
export
boom to the US, President Fox assumes power at a time of great promise.
Someone who wants to blame the exchange rate for India’s
export
slowdown can look at the index from the low point of September 2013 and argue that it has appreciated 20% (based on the IMF measure).
So if the exchange rate is unlikely to be helpful, how should India
export
more?
Countries that borrow abroad must
export
in order to service their debts.
But, while Russia (and Iran) were once Turkey’s great geo-political rivals, today they are
export
markets and energy suppliers.
They are now fully aware that their slightly nostalgic post-colonial view of these countries as large
export
markets and deep reservoirs of cheap labor has become outdated.
linked with the euro, which is in the throes of an existential crisis...”This has resulted in another, albeit unintended, consequence: “Unscrupulous politicians, bureaucrats and businessmen, who have stashed their illicit wealth abroad, are bringing some of it back,” passing off the money as
export
earnings.
So slower growth in demand in what has become by far the most important
export
market has significant potential to disrupt the progress of Eastern European economies.
The
export
of Syria’s civil war is likely to consume far more time in the coming months than either candidate wants to admit.
This is also a chance, once and for all, to put an end to the
export
of wars and coercion, and to become an example of peaceful collaboration.
First, international trade is based on the principle of comparative advantage; countries
export
goods in which they have a relative advantage and import goods in which they have a relative disadvantage.
Nowadays, we are witnessing the application of Sun’s ideas in Africa, where China’s prime objectives are to secure energy and mineral supplies to fuel its breakneck economic expansion, open up new markets, curtail Taiwan’s influence on the continent, consolidate its burgeoning global authority, and clinch for themselves African-allocated
export
quotas.
Today, China has seized control of a huge swath of local African industries, in the process grabbing their allocated
export
quotas.
All reconstruction plans depend in the long run on the ability of Iraq to
export
oil in large quantities.
And if political scandals were
export
goods, Brazil would have a clear comparative advantage.
For one thing, the Fed’s retreat partly reflects growing confidence in the US economy, which should mean a stronger
export
market for most emerging economies.
Energy exporters such as Russia are feeling the downward pressure on
export
prices.
Their
export
markets in emerging economies will suffer, damping hopes of a trade-led recovery, but that negative effect stands to be more than offset by the windfall from a big drop in energy costs.
Most obviously, Brexit would damage Britain’s
export
competitiveness.
In 1997, South Korea would have ranked first in
export
sophistication, followed by Malaysia, Thailand, Turkey, Argentina, and Indonesia – a sequence that mirrors the duration of the recovery.
Why would a more sophisticated
export
base support recovery from financial crisis?
As the 2015 IMF World Economic Outlook report shows, despite the rise of global value chains, the exchange rate still matters for
export
growth.
In addition, more sophisticated and differentiated
export
products tend to respond more to exchange-rate fluctuations.
The IMF’s Reda Cherif, Fuad Hasanov, and Lichen Wang recently showed that
export
sophistication is the most robust determinant of an economy’s growth.
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