Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
With a more sophisticated
export
base, however, the risks of protracted recession will be significantly diminished.
But domestic suppression has only served to
export
and expand the problem.
Unfortunately, faced with the growing risks to the dollar’s status, American policymakers, rather than nursing the country’s premier export, seem to be more interested in milking it.
Excess
export
growth in the large surplus economies enabled the excesses of the world’s largest consumer.
Spurred by Deng Xiaoping’s “reform and opening up,” China’s
export
sector increased sixfold – from 6% of GDP in 1980 to 36% in 2006.
The same was true in major developed economies, albeit to a lesser extreme: Germany’s
export
share of GDP went from 19% in 1980 to 43% in 2007, while Japan’s went from 13% to 17.5% over the same period.
Indeed, even after the new stimulus package, China will still depend on investment and
export
for growth.
For example, China persisted with its unannounced rare-earth embargo against Japan for seven weeks while continuing to claim in public that no
export
restrictions had been imposed.
Another devaluation of the CFA franc today might deflate France’s debts to the franc zone and boost its African-based
export
industries, but it would worsen the& franc-zone& countries’ miseries.
Supporters of lifting the arms
export
ban argue that this litany of sins does not reflect China’s real improvements in human rights and penalizes European armaments jobs to the benefit of Russia, which enjoys a lively arms trade with its neighbor (something it might one day regret).
From 1949 until the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Consultative Group Coordinating Committee (Cocom) monitored and controlled the
export
of Western technology to the Soviet Union.
The leading explanation for Germany’s impressive recent
export
performance is wage restraint.
Indeed, when I studied the top 1% of German exporters – the country’s
export
superstars – I found that they more than doubled their share of the world
export
market when they opted to decentralize their organizations.
Indeed, the lesson of the Volkswagen scandal is that this culture may be necessary for its
export
model to work.
To accommodate this change in spending patterns, the dollar weakened, enabling the US to
export
more.
Emerging markets, for their part, have learned that
export
surpluses are no guarantee of rapid growth.
And the so-called “three principles on arms exports” have placed absurd limits on what may be sold or supplied abroad, as even flying boats used for sea rescue have been viewed as banned from
export.
And its
export
lobby is fighting fiercely to keep the exchange rate roughly where it is relative to the dollar.
And his trade and industry minister is unlikely to repeat the antics of a recent predecessor, who placed a gun on the table while negotiating import and
export
quotas with local producers.
It would also mean that the European market, currently China’s largest source of
export
demand, would be far weaker.
South Korea, which has agreed to adopt “voluntary
export
restraints” in exchange for an exemption from US steel tariffs, is asking its domestic producers’ association to allocate
export
quotas among its members.
In recent years, China has been offloading its labor-intensive
export
sectors to less-developed countries with lower labor costs.
Even at Japan’s world-beating
export
firms, reluctance to confront the ingrained interests of the old-boy network has made it difficult to prune less profitable product lines – and the workers who make them.
Most of the investments are aimed at producing food or other crops for
export
from the countries in which the land is acquired, for the obvious reason that richer countries can pay more for the output.
More than 40% of such projects aim to
export
food to the source country – suggesting that food security is a major reason for buying the land.
Why does the purchase of body parts give rise to international condemnation, while the purchase of agricultural land does not – even when it involves evicting local landholders and producing food for
export
to rich countries instead of for local consumption?
After all, a dynamic Chinese economy is in the interest of many other countries, especially those that can
export
the goods and services that a more modern, consumer-driven China needs.
The International Monetary Fund credits Asian intra-regional trade as the main factor behind its recent
export
boom and strong economic growth.
This will lead to a further escalation of Western sanctions: restrictions on gas exports, general
export
restrictions, suspension from the World Trade Organization, withdrawal of the FIFA 2018 World Cup soccer tournament, and so on.
All of this will be good for the eurozone, for which the US remains a leading
export
market.
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