Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
Export
volume has stagnated and imports are rising at double digit levels.
Say what you want about free trade, but in many countries, humans have replaced sugar, bananas and coffee as the number one
export.
A few deals to
export
Russian hydrocarbons to China can be expected, but not much more.
America’s ability to
export
would also be undermined, because foreign markets would likely be affected, and because, in any case, if
export
firms cannot get credit, they most likely cannot produce.
The response was that the strong dollar meant a strong economy, and a strong economy strengthens the ability to
export.
Nevertheless, investors around the world currently fear such a scenario, and this may create a self-fulfilling prophesy, because it helps to drive down the dollar, boost
export
demand, and make US imports more expensive.
But the strengthening euro reduces both import prices and
export
demand, which, in itself, causes prices to fall .
As a result, these labor-intensive sectors must release a lot of labor and capital, which push into the capital-intensive
export
sectors that are better able to cope with high wages.
Astonishingly, many interpret Germany’s
export
boom and current-account surplus, which measures these capital exports, as an indicator of the strength of Germany as an investment location.
Unless and until German workers accept the need for greater flexibility in the face of global competition,
export
profits will continue to be invested abroad, reducing overall production costs – and reinforcing the bazaar economy at home.
Finally, the EU insists that Russia abolish planned prohibitive
export
tariffs on lumber.
It was becoming increasingly clear that as China continued to grow faster than almost anyone else, the rest of the world’s import capacity (and tolerance) could not keep up with China’s
export
machine.
And it has deployed a variety of methods – including weak intellectual property (IP) protections, technology transfers as a condition for joint ventures with Chinese partners, evasion of
export
controls, and regulatory harassment – to acquire such technologies from the US and other trading partners.
A special report on semiconductors – essential to US national security and economic competitiveness – for President Barack’s Obama’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) provides some answers.The report, written by a nonpartisan group of business and academic leaders (I was a member), proposed that the US work with its allies to enforce international law, push China to comply with its World Trade Organization obligations, and strengthen
export
controls and inward investment restrictions.
The European Union, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan all have prominent roles in the global supply chain for semiconductors, and some have already tightened security on the flow of semiconductor IP to China and on the acquisition of semiconductor companies by Chinese investors.The PCAST report recommends that the US adopt similar tactics, calibrating
export
controls and inward investment limits according to China’s behavior.
The report, written by a nonpartisan group of business and academic leaders (I was a member), proposed that the US work with its allies to enforce international law, push China to comply with its World Trade Organization obligations, and strengthen
export
controls and inward investment restrictions.
The PCAST report recommends that the US adopt similar tactics, calibrating
export
controls and inward investment limits according to China’s behavior.
Developing countries, long encouraged or even compelled to
export
and otherwise embrace globalization, have been abruptly told to switch course: to produce for the domestic market and to import more.
Integrating cleaner power into national energy systems would not only raise local capacities; it would also free up hydrocarbons for
export.
China has been suffering from the aftereffects of the 2008 financial crisis and plummeting
export
demand.
From 1979 to 2013, annual
export
growth averaged 16.8%.
To be sure, this form of globalization allows foreign producers to
export
goods and services to distant markets at a lower cost.
But it also opens up
export
markets and reduces costs for the other side.
China’s rebalancing is apparent, first and foremost, in the
export
sector.
Chile was hit hard by the 2008-2009 financial crisis: foreign loans vanished and the price of copper, Chile’s main export, collapsed.
The
export
basket of economically diversified countries like Thailand, Malaysia, Mexico, and Ireland is entirely different from what it was a generation ago.
By contrast, Chile’s
export
basket has remained unchanged.
“First, China does not
export
revolution; second, it does not
export
famine and poverty; and, third, it does not mess around with you.
Trump will probably be unable to fulfill his promise to increase the US economy’s
export
share.
Core countries also kept their domestic markets open, allowing East Asian countries to
export
freely the manufactured products that resulted.
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