Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
A carefully focused
export
strategy is crucial.
Finally, the US should take advantage of its enduring position as Pakistan’s largest
export
market to tighten the economic screws on the cash-strapped country.
While the EU has at least some means - like preferential trade agreements and associations - to
export
something of its own stability to neighboring countries, NATO as a security alliance has no such means.
For China, which to some extent still depends on external markets to drive economic growth, this environment is particularly challenging – especially as currency depreciation in Europe and Japan erode
export
demand further.
Given weak growth in external demand and an already-large market share for many goods, China cannot count on
export
growth to sustain economic performance in the short run.
But, as GIPS’ central-bank lending came at the expense of central-bank lending within the eurozone’s exporting countries, the policy amounted to a forced capital
export
from these countries to the GIPS.
For the US, the eight other TPP countries, with a combined population of 200 million, constitute its fourth largest
export
market, behind only China, the European Union, and Japan.
All ECO’s partners would prefer to both import from and
export
to Western and developed Asian economies.
Germany also is demonstrating that sound clean-energy policies can drive not only domestic investment and installations, but also manufacturing and
export
opportunities.
Flawed US policy has opened the way for these efforts, in part by helping to turn China into an
export
juggernaut.
Yes, the US is one of China’s largest
export
markets – and thus a central pillar of its spectacular 35-year development trajectory.
But the US has also become heavily dependent on China, which is now America’s third largest and fastest-growing
export
market.
Successful modernization and democratization of Turkey – with a strong civil society, the rule of law, and a modern economy – will not only be hugely beneficial for Turkey, but will also
export
stability and serve as a model for transformation in the Islamic world.
Thus, nuclear power will halt the decline in government revenues by freeing more oil and natural gas for
export.
Over the longer term, a strong currency promotes efficiency in
export
industries, further insulating competitiveness from exchange-rate effects.
And China relied heavily on the US dollar to anchor its undervalued currency, allowing it to boost its
export
competitiveness.
In doing so, the US could draw support from exports, especially to a rebalanced China – currently its third-largest and fastest-growing major
export
market.
Lacking access to basic economic tools such as exchange rate and monetary policies, Argentina could not surmount the profound external shocks of the second half of the 1990s, when
export
prices fell, the US dollar appreciated, and Brazil, the country's main trading partner, devalued its currency.
Even those countries that were better prepared were made painfully aware of the after-effects of crisis:
export
markets collapsed, commodity prices fell, and credit markets seized up.
For Eastern Europe, this boils down to four major areas: (1) an overdependence on natural resources; (2)
export
imbalances, in terms of product mix and foreign markets; (3) small, inadequate capital markets; and (4) inefficient production and use of energy.
In the long run, as labor shortages become acute, China will need to relinquish some low-end, labor-intensive manufacturing activities, which will translate into decelerating
export
performance and lower economic growth.
For Australia, which counts China as its most important trade partner, the share is 28%, compared to just 7% for the US, Australia’s third-largest
export
market.
China now ranks in the top-five
export
markets for 12 of Latin America’s 20 countries, and is the region’s biggest customer for raw materials.
They intend to
export
oil embedded in other products, such as petrochemicals, plastic, aluminum, etc.
On the one hand, the euro protected the eurozone, particularly Germany’s
export
economy, from speculative attacks and the chaos of currency volatility.
Firms again demand it, claiming that otherwise they cannot
export.
Surveys indicate that the internal market has helped more than 60% of companies that
export
to more than five EU countries boost their cross-border sales, and that 80% of consumers believe that the range of goods has increased, while 67% say that their quality has improved.
The budget surplus and
export
revenues allow the economy to service its foreign debt, while bank recapitalization permits renewed credit expansion.
If the
export
boost is large enough and rapid enough, the earnings it brings largely offset the decline in domestic demand, and overall output is stabilized or even returned to growth.
Spain, Ireland, and Portugal were all able to cushion their post-2008 slumps with a surge in
export
earnings.
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