Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
In fact, Greek
export
earnings in 2013, at €53 billion, were actually €3 billion lower than in 2008, even after domestic demand collapsed.
Third, administrative, regulatory, and tax obstacles hindered the
export
response, especially as the tax increases in the rescue packages made it even harder for small and medium-size enterprises to grow and establish new markets abroad.
Their approach has been to extend new loans so that Greece can service its existing debts, without restoring Greece’s banking system or promoting its
export
competitiveness.
The Soviet Union also wanted to surround itself with a protective buffer of like-minded states, and Italy’s Benito Mussolini was proud that for a time fascism was a competitive
export.
Indeed, by 2007, central and eastern Europe had become the second most important
export
destination for euro-zone countries.
They were temporarily bailed out by strong world prices for their
export
commodities, but that ended last year.
In the coming years, the Gulf countries can be expected to import fewer workers from the rest of the Arab world, and to
export
less capital to it.
But Asia cannot be complacent: financial systems remain fragile; economies are burdened with high fiscal and current-account deficits; and Asia remains too heavily dependent on North American and European
export
markets, increasing its vulnerability to external shocks.
Finally, as a country that does not
export
vital natural resources and is dependent on substantial commodity imports, India needs an open, competitive, vibrant system of international trade and finance.
After all, they have benefited most from the euro, which has enabled them to
export
cheaply to southern Europeans.
For example, retaliatory tariffs by China – the third-largest and fastest-growing US
export
market – could put a real crimp in America’s leading exports to the country: soybeans, aircraft, a broad array of machinery, and motor vehicles parts.
This is not clothing or cars, but America’s largest, and most renowned,
export
sector.
Big winners are workers in poor countries who get better jobs working for firms that can now
export
services to rich countries.
In addition, the fact that nearly 40% of the US corn crop is being used for ethanol, up from around 5% a few years ago, means that corn prices must be higher to meet the feed, export, and ethanol demands for corn.
In general, natural resources like oil, gas, diamonds, and other precious minerals breed corruption, because governments can live off of their
export
earnings without having to “compromise” with their own societies.
Now, as then, the fear is that if all countries try to depreciate their currency to gain
export
competitiveness and boost their economies, all will fail.
In order to reduce the bilateral trade surplus, Japan introduced so-called voluntary
export
restraints, which hollowed out its real economy, while providing excessive protection to its non-tradable sectors.
To ease trade frictions, unlike Japan’s voluntary
export
restraints, China’s leaders have promised to increase imports and open up the domestic market, with President Xi Jinping predicting $8 trillion worth of merchandise imports within the next five years.
The impact would be even greater if US and European countries responded to Chinese calls to
export
high-tech products more freely.
Moreover, such a slowdown would devastate the developing world, as weaker performance in the advanced economies reduces the growth of
export
markets.
He called for financial transfers from advanced to developing economies to compensate for displaced productive and
export
capacities (and lost tax revenues), and to enable recipient countries to overhaul those capacities to become more competitive.
Perhaps capital expenditures were overly ambitious, but they triggered rapid
export
growth, and more than 2,000 jobs were created in the small town of Pirot to manufacture boots for European fishermen and New York City firemen, as well as technical rubber products.
Given patchy global demand, rapid
export
growth will be difficult to achieve.
Nor can the small uptick in the eurozone’s growth, much less the relatively rapid expansion in Spain and Ireland, be attributed to the German recipe of fiscal consolidation and measures to increase
export
competitiveness.
Ireland, after all, is a tiny, highly open economy whose booming
export
sector is benefiting from existing strengths – including low business taxes, a skilled workforce, and a flexible economy – and favorable external conditions, especially the strong recovery in its main markets, the US and Britain.
These countries
export
manufactured goods to the US, on which they also rely for tourism and remittances; they lack either the geography or the geology to become great commodity exporters (or, like Mexico, they
export
all of their oil to the US).
The falling price of copper, Chile’s main
export
commodity, suggests what lies ahead.
And it was after the Communists crushed the pro-democracy movement in 1989 that the US helped to turn China into an
export
juggernaut that has accumulated massive trade surpluses and become the principal source of capital flows to the US.
There are good reasons for China – and other economies – to resist the pressure to conform to a mold imposed on them by US
export
lobbies.
He will be able to point out, at least in private, that if you look at the real effective exchange rate – taking account of the impact on
export
prices of rising labor costs – the renminbi-dollar gap is a lot less important than China’s critics suggest.
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