Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
Already, most
export
taxes and currency controls have been scrapped, income taxes have been cut, and the exchange rate has been freed up, allowing for an immediate 30% depreciation of the peso.
And they should remember that without the
export
markets that the BRICS and other emerging countries represent, all attempts to rebalance their economies will be in vain.
The sharp fall in
export
income is rapidly changing the situation, but Russia is starting from a comfortable position.
Putin’s decision not to implement the unpopular reforms that would have created a strong non-oil
export
sector may have been bad for the economy’s long-term health, but it has allowed him to maintain widespread public support.
In Venezuela, where oil represents 95% of
export
revenues, voters naturally turned on the ruling Socialist Party.
Since then, China has aggressively pursued a fast-growth, export, and investment heavy model of economic development.
American companies
export
more than $300 billion in goods and services to countries in the region each year.
Germany, with its history of a strong deutsche mark and very competitive costs, likes the strong euro more than, say, its partners, France and Italy, which have histories of weak domestic currencies and non-competitive
export
costs.
Some viewed the pound’s rapid decline in 2007 and 2008 – a 30% depreciation in trade-weighted terms – as a much-needed economic stimulus, given the boost that it implied for
export
competitiveness.
Assuming that well-informed Chinese businesses know this, they will not cut their
export
prices to absorb the cost of US tariffs.
If, however, evidence starts to emerge of
export
weakness, China can and should compensate with additional steps to boost domestic demand.
Governments will suffer, too, as their foreign debt – boosted by fiscal and monetary expansion that yielded little growth – becomes much more burdensome, while the
export
stimulus from lower exchange rates will be small, owing to the absence of new capacity outside the commodity sectors.
If China were to sell its US assets, the dollar would weaken, and US companies would find it easier to
export
and to compete against imports.
Instead of letting the renminbi appreciate and gradually reducing their reliance on
export
markets, the Chinese authorities preferred to accumulate foreign reserves (US Treasury debt).
The resulting stalemate has impeded meaningful discussion of the main issues – including non-tariff measures,
export
restrictions, electronic commerce, exchange rates, and the trade implications of climate-change-related policies – raised by an open global economy.
And, at the multilateral level, agricultural production and trade is influenced by policies on subsidies, tariffs, and
export
restrictions (although the latter are not currently governed by strict WTO rules).
Future WTO rules on
export
restrictions could help to stabilize international markets for agricultural commodities.
Indeed, a country affected by a world recession or by falling
export
prices is much more vulnerable if its external debt is 40% or 50% of the value of its net exports than if it has little or no net foreign debt.
Starting with the advanced countries, the eurozone recession has spread from the periphery to the core, with France entering recession and Germany facing a double whammy of slowing growth in one major
export
market (China/Asia) and outright contraction in others (southern Europe).
When the dollar depreciates against other currencies it drives up the dollar price of imports, meaning that the
export
earnings of developing countries buy fewer of such items.
Weak growth in China’s major
export
markets (particularly in Europe, North America, and Japan), together with rapidly rising domestic wages and incomes, is driving the tradable part of the economy toward higher-value components in global supply chains.
China is already Japan’s largest
export
market, leaving it ideally situated to capture additional market share in the coming surge of Chinese demand for consumer products and services.
In the 1970s and 1980s, Japan was the envy of the world, owing to an all-powerful
export
machine that tapped the demand of a rapidly growing global economy.
In addition, the Iranians said that they would
export
their existing low-enriched uranium to be fabricated into nuclear fuel outside of Iran.
Unlike landlocked Bolivia, Ecuador is able to
export
its oil through its own ports.
Factories need reliable supplies of power to operate effectively, good roads and railways to source inputs and distribute products, and, if they are to
export
those products, ports for cargo ships and airports for high-value items and business travel.
Recognizing the need for systemic change, China allowed local governments in special economic zones and cities to experiment with modern legal, administrative, and logistical practices for
export
industries, including investments in utilities and transport.
Whereas German exports are falling at an annual rate of 20%, the portion of imports that does not consist of intermediate products for
export
goods is stable, helping the world as a whole.
As a result, China has become South Korea’s single largest
export
market, and Japan’s second largest.
But, because it focuses mainly on tariffs, AGOA has limited capacity to address other economic challenges in African countries, such as supply-side constraints to regional and global trade, and the need for greater value-added production and
export
diversification.
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