Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
This relative prosperity lasted until the second oil shock of 1979, when global stagflation depressed prices for the primary commodities that comprise the Ivory Coast’s narrow
export
base, while rising interest rates increased the cost of servicing the debt contracted by the Houphouet regime.
Time-bound subsidy schemes, public venture funds, and
export
subsidization are some of the ways in which this approach can be implemented, but there are many others.
It also requires that at least eight million American workers who are now employed in construction, consumer services, and related industries find new jobs in
export
and import-competing industries.
Economists see a case for trade agreements for large countries because these countries can manipulate their terms of trade – the world prices of the goods they
export
and import.
Indeed, WTO rules prohibit
export
subsidies – which, economically speaking, are enrich-thy-neighbor policies – while placing no direct restraints on
export
taxes.
It was assumed that this would generate strong domestic demand in Germany, helping the periphery to
export
more.
It is imperative to avoid using direct Chinese investment for the short-term
export
of production capacity, which would not be in China’s interest – and often not in the recipient’s interest, either.
Of course, it is always easier to
export
blame than to shoulder it.
How does a savings glut translate into exports, given that households do not
export?
Policies aimed at ensuring export-led growth also include
export
subsidies and barriers to imports.
This increases developing countries exports and reduces their import demand (or increases it at a lower rate than
export
growth).
These bullets can be big, especially when compared with past debt obligations or future
export
earnings.
Japan’s
export
growth was crippled by these non-market interventions, not by a loss of competitiveness.
Moreover, the Bush and Clinton Administrations warned that Japan should not
export
its way out of trouble, as if a trade surplus resulting from
export
growth was somehow “unfair.”
In 1992, subsidized credits,
export
subsidies, and import subsidies generated gross rents of some $60 billion in Russia.
The de facto
export
ban on rare-earth elements – often referred to as “industrial vitamins” – struck a terrible blow to Japanese companies, which rely on China for 97% of their supply.
Chinese officials say that concern over the overexploitation and illicit
export
of rare earths prompted them to regulate the industry more closely.
Indeed, this ideological divide is likely to become more defined in the coming years, as the independence of central banks around the world is threatened by new rules and regulations; as China – and, more generally, Asia –
export
inflation (reflected in US import prices); as protectionism rises, hitting free trade hard; and as new productivity-enhancing innovations, such as the Internet, remain absent.
Oil accounts for about 98% of Iraq’s current
export
revenue.
But periphery countries without large
export
surpluses are not in a position to employ countercyclical policies.ampnbsp;
This is good news not only for Germany, but also for Europe as a whole, as the business climate for German manufacturers reflects that in the rest of Europe – their main
export
market.
But, given increasing capacity utilization in the
export
industries, as well as higher investment requirements owing to the normal capital replacement cycle, domestic investment demand is now also rising.
The deliberate undervaluation of China’s currency, and the fall in the dollar, are both putting a squeeze on the
export
prospects of the European Union members and other countries like Canada and Mexico, and China’s covert and not so covert
export
subsidies and import barriers exacerbate the problem.
They want to access the American market and use Gulf Coast ports to
export
more widely, but Keystone XL is not their only option.
If Obama blocks the pipeline, they will build others, and other
export
facilities – if not on Canada’s environmentally delicate Pacific coast, then at some already-industrialized Atlantic port.
China, which has faced sharp criticism from the US, the EU and Japan for unfair trade practices – including
export
subsidies, currency manipulation, intellectual-property theft, and forced technology transfer – has a particular responsibility here.
New
export
markets and private investment opportunities opened up in developing countries.
Oil-rich states need global networks to sell their oil, to
export
their capital, and to import technologies and technologists.
And, eventually, some of them will be able to raise capital and start firms of their own –
export
companies owned and operated by Africans.
In the 1970s, the government set up industrial parks to process textiles and garments for
export.
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