Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
When capital moves into a particular country, its currency appreciates, cooling off the
export
sector sufficiently to compensate for the booming domestically-oriented sectors that profit from the availability of foreign credit.
The China Threat, Part Two?Lost in the debates about whether the European Union should lift its arms
export
embargo on China is a much broader and more pressing question: does the Bush administration once again see China as a strategic competitor, as it did in the early days of the Bush presidency, before the war on terror forced Bush to seek cooperation with China’s rulers?
Reinhart and Rogoff offer a couple of reasons for the difference in recovery rates: the slow policy response to the Great Depression and the gold standard, which meant that individual countries could not
export
their way out of depression.
Bolivia prohibited the
export
of corn, rice, meat, and vegetable oil.
To curb inflation, Argentina decided to suspend the sale of wheat to its principal
export
market, Brazil, where the price of bread had increased 20% over the last 12 months.
Countries could exceed their
export
quotas only if they paid a fine equal to the difference between the value of their actual and allowed exports.
And if they tried to
export
more than allowed without paying the fine, their surplus exports would be blocked.
It needs to show that its mission is to build up weak states, help them overcome short-term crises, and nurture democracy, rather than treat them as empty vessels for the
export
of EU policy.
Modern services are becoming increasingly tradable, providing new
export
opportunities.
India and the Philippines, for example, have established themselves as world leaders in the
export
of outsourced business processes.
Nonetheless, some sort of accord, whatever its gritty nuances, is both possible and necessary, given that preventing Afghanistan from relapsing into civil war or again becoming an
export
base for terrorism is in everyone’s interest, including Pakistan’s.
For ASEAN, the shift from centralized global supply chains to localized production systems could have a serious impact on
export
revenues and the investment by which it is driven.
The Real Raw Material of WealthTIRANA – Poor countries
export
raw materials such as cocoa, iron ore, and raw diamonds.
Rich countries
export
– often to those same poor countries – more complex products such as chocolate, cars, and jewels.
Poor countries could follow the example of South Africa and Botswana and use their natural wealth to force industrialization by restricting the
export
of minerals in raw form (a policy known locally as “beneficiation”).
A classical economist would argue that, given this, the country should
export
wood, which Finland has done.
By contrast, a traditional development economist would argue that it should not
export
wood; instead, it should add value by transforming the wood into paper or furniture – something that Finland also does.
Beneficiation forces extractive industries to sell locally below their
export
price, thus operating as an implicit tax that serves to subsidize downstream activities.
There is a lesson here for the United States, which has had a major beneficiation policy since the 1973 oil embargo, when it restricted the
export
of crude oil and natural gas.
As a result, the domestic natural-gas price is well below the
export
price.
In this context, China’s only option is to abandon its low-cost manufacturing
export
model and move up global supply chains.
The country’s GDP growth is slowing, owing to declining infrastructure investment and poor
export
performance – trends that investors now fear could be reinforced by the tit-for-tat trade war that the United States has initiated.
Perhaps a wholesale collapse of the euro exchange rate will be enough, triggering an
export
boom.
Their
export
earnings have plummeted – falling by half in many cases – forcing them to run deficits and draw on the large sovereign-wealth funds they accumulated during the global commodity boom.
India has suffered, like most developing countries, from declining foreign investment, poor
export
performance, and a depreciating currency.
If they lost the huge
export
market next door, well, that would simply be too bad.
The resolution bans North Korean exports of coal, iron, iron ore, lead, lead ore, and seafood products, which together account for one third of the country’s already meager annual
export
revenue of $3 billion.
China’s suspension of North Korean coal imports alone – part of its obligations under the Security Council resolution – will reduce the North’s
export
earnings by an estimated $400 million this year (while also costing China a pretty penny).
The sharp drop in international prices for commodities, such as oil and copper, together with a slowing Chinese economy, has reduced the region’s
export
earnings and accentuated domestic economic challenges.
The ministry’s baseline forecast assumes that the price of oil – Russia’s main
export
– will grow at 9% per year in real terms over the next 17 years, or more than three times the forecast for Russia’s annual GDP growth.
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