Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
This is unlikely to change in the near future, as liquefaction and transport costs will keep LNG prices high even if the US issues more
export
permits.
That implies a potential boon to Russia’s main gas producers, especially as Europe’s energy-diversification campaign weakens
export
demand.
In an attempt to push Haiti toward democracy, the US imposed economic sanctions, which crippled Haiti’s fragile and newly emerging
export
sector, especially apparel and other labor-intensive production.
In 2010, for example, Russia imposed an
export
ban on wheat, following a severe drought.
Oil and gas prices were sky high, with
export
revenues flooding the Kremlin’s coffers.
This means encouraging domestic entrepreneurs to manufacture goods for
export
and inviting the world’s top companies to relocate production to India.
But for China, there is the additional problem of how to extend its franchise as
export
superpower into the machine age.
Both Japan and Switzerland have engaged in outright currency intervention in recent years, and the US itself may well join their ranks, when the strong dollar’s impact on US
export
competitiveness becomes untenable.
Likewise, while policies that encourage firms to increase wages will raise household income and domestic consumption, wage increases can erode
export
competitiveness and choke off inflows of foreign direct investment.
But now, with oil prices down sharply, Russia’s
export
revenue has plummeted by 30% this year, and state funds have become very scarce.
Similarly, on trade policy, some protectionist measures can deliver quick benefits to a sector or even a country, and in the case of well-crafted
export
subsidies, those benefits may last a long time.
Industrial policies must be based on a country’s factor endowments, and should build on concrete opportunities to integrate industries and firms in global value chains – for example, by deepening existing linkages with international production networks and
export
markets – while avoiding overinvestment in international growth laggards.
In 1971, Americans were feeling the effects of a German and Japanese
export
surge.
Americans, by contrast, thought that Japan and Germany were artificially holding down their currencies’ value in order to get an unfair advantage for their politically powerful
export
industries.
The IMF warns about “Dutch disease” problems, when an influx of foreign exchange drives up the local currency’s exchange rate, making it difficult to create jobs in the
export
sector or to protect jobs against an onslaught of cheaper foreign imports.
Indeed, as the IMF has pointed out in its World Economic Outlook, these flows threaten to inflate asset bubbles, make it harder for countries to pursue an independent monetary policy, and trigger currency appreciation and associated losses in
export
competitiveness.
If the adjustment came abruptly, Chinese companies would suffer a sudden loss of competitiveness and no longer be able to
export.
Now assume that the renminbi appreciates only moderately, so that China continues to
export
to the US at higher prices but lower profits.
For all Reagan’s free-trade rhetoric, he freely imposed trade restrictions, including the notorious “voluntary”
export
restraints on automobiles.
Whether to prevent the appearance of inadequate insurance or to avoid losing
export
share, sizable interventions in currency markets became widely accepted among Asia’s emerging economies as a natural response to large capital inflows – directly contradicting these countries’ commitments to floating exchange rates.
For example, the cotton textile industry that developed in Bombay between 1857 and 1947 operated with no employment restrictions, complete security of capital, a stable and efficient legal system, no import or
export
controls, freedom of entry by entrepreneurs from around the world, and free access to the British market.
An exchange rate of $1.4:€1 is cheap for Germany’s
export
powerhouse, which could probably operate well even with a far stronger euro.
In this case, we should have equal regard for workers in the domestic economy and those employed in
export
industries.
Trump’s protectionist measures will weaken world trade, increase domestic inflation, and strengthen the dollar, causing America’s
export
industries to suffer.
At present,
export
subsidies and support payments represent less than 1% of the European agricultural budget, and the EU has undertaken to eliminate them once it receives reciprocal undertakings from major food-exporting countries.
China’s
export
machine sucks in vast quantities of parts and components for final assembly from across Asia – Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Indonesia, as well as richer Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan.
Because Germany, the eurozone’s largest economy, shares a currency with poorer member states, it enjoys an artificial boost to
export
competitiveness.
First, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) led to the
export
of high-quality manufacturing jobs to Mexico.
Moreover, recession on the periphery is now spreading to the eurozone core, with French output contracting and even Germany stalling as growth in its two main
export
markets is either falling (the rest of the eurozone) or slowing (China and elsewhere in Asia).
Foreign investors hope to use large mechanized farms to produce output for export, leaving little or nothing for the local populations.
Back
Next
Related words
Countries
Growth
Their
Which
Markets
Would
Market
Trade
Other
Economy
Demand
Domestic
Global
Goods
Country
Prices
Investment
Sector
Economic
Competitiveness