Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
In the wake of the resulting collapse of
export
receipts and budget revenues, OPEC adopted a new approach, based on a modernized production agreement with two key features: greater flexibility for countries facing especially complex internal conditions (such as Libya) and the inclusion of non-OPEC producers, particularly Russia.
India is showing keen interest in the region’s energy industry, and has signed
export
agreements in the defense sector.
More than 40% of US exports now go to Mexico and Central and South America, the US’s fastest-growing
export
destination.
Second, imports often provide cheaper inputs than what is available in the United States, which enables American manufacturers to compete better with foreign firms in
export
markets, and to maintain their share of domestic markets.
One last consideration is that exporting countries will have to correct their balance of payments if their
export
earnings drop significantly.
Export
earnings finance imports for most of the world, so if US imports drop, US exports will fall by approximately the same amount.
With domestic demand still weak – real consumption has grown at an anemic 1.4% pace over the past 7.5 years – the US needs
export
growth more than ever.
So the outlook for China, America’s third-largest and most rapidly growing major
export
market, is crucial for a Fed that has failed to gain much traction from its unconventional post-crisis monetary policies.
Currently, only oil production and
export
benefit from capital accumulation, whereas large sums are simply being sent out of the country.
The trade war has hurt Ukraine more; but Russia, too, has lost a significant
export
market and a major source of imported military equipment.
However, recovery in transition economies from Estonia to Poland to Hungary is usually
export
led.
In both cases, regaining monetary sovereignty allowed a more competitive currency, which in turn increased
export
demand and assisted economic recovery.
Though the country's whopping current-account deficit is gone, this reflects a collapse of imports – a result of austerity – rather than an
export
boom.
Higher energy costs (owing to increases in both excise taxes and electricity rates), credit bottlenecks, specialization in stagnant
export
markets, and generalized policy uncertainty all seem to have played a role.
As a result, Greek
export
prices have not come down nearly as much as wages.
Dictators easily
export
their ideas to open societies, whereas content produced under conditions of freedom rarely moves in the opposite direction.
Export
diplomacy is important, but
export
promotion , visiting stores and talking to buyers, is even more vital.
Little wonder, then, that Argentina's current crisis is so harsh: the portion of its economy that can generate the
export
revenues necessary to repay foreign debt is too small.
When a country reaches the point that it needs all its exports to service its national debt, and the size of the
export
sector is fixed, nothing is left to pay for imports.
The alternative is to capitalize on the unique opportunity that this year's devaluation of the peso offers by making the competitiveness gains last long enough to shift resources into the
export
sector.
Of course, this will depress real wages and consumption, because the rise in peso revenues will be used instead to finance the investment needed to expand the
export
sector.
This will lead to the creation of new firms and the retooling of existing ones to make them fit to
export.
Eventually productivity gains in a larger
export
sector will drive up real wages and consumption.
The minister for education would do her country a profound service if she were to re-allocate resources to courses designed to train
export
promoters.
How, then, can China expect to achieve the
export
diversification and technological upgrading that it needs to move up the global value chain?
In Mexico, authorities recently freed almost 300 people, including 39 teenagers, who were being “held in slave-like conditions at a camp where tomatoes are sorted and packed for export.”
Similarly, the
export
lobby in China has no interest in a strong renminbi, even though it is in China’s long-term interest to let its currency appreciate.
Meanwhile, economic recovery in the advanced economies, especially the United States and Europe, is reinvigorating external demand, leading analysts to project annual Chinese
export
growth of more than 10% this year – 3-4 percentage points higher than in 2013.
Only then could
export
growth, impressive since mid-2009, sustain further increases.
NAFTA brought about the
export
boom that many hailed and predicted, but it did nothing to stem northward immigration.
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