Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
And economists have started to calculate that if China were to continue its prodigious growth rate, it would soon occupy far too large a share of the global economy to maintain its recent
export
trajectory.
Starting with Cavallo, Argentina’s boosters argue that these problems are transitory, and blame the country’s difficulties on turmoil in world financial markets and the US dollar’s excessive strength in relation to the Euro, which reduces Argentina’s
export
competitiveness.
Brazil’s devaluation in 1999 also undermined
export
competitiveness.
Argentina is vulnerable to external shocks such as declining agricultural commodity prices because Argentina failed to develop a diversified
export
sector, one in which a broad range of industrial and service sectors are internationally competitive.
So far, most discussions in Europe regarding how to reduce Russian energy imports – which account for 34% of the EU’s gas consumption – have focused on the United States, where the rapid development of shale reserves has made a huge supply of gas available for
export.
To its credit, the Canadian government has pushed for robust bilateral free-trade agreements worldwide, including, most recently, with South Korea – Asia’s fourth-largest economy and Canada’s seventh-largest
export
market.
When the exchange rate soars as a result of resource booms, countries cannot
export
manufactured or agriculture goods, and domestic producers cannot compete with an onslaught of imports.
The government, unable to print money to bail out the banks or increase
export
competitiveness through currency devaluation, is left with only two options: default or deflation (austerity).
The opposition underestimates the Kirchners’ achievements, arguing that the international context, particularly high commodity prices – and thus strong
export
revenues – bailed them out.
While that is true, high
export
prices alone were no guarantee for success.
Countries like New Zealand and Peru, unable to depend on developed countries for
export
demand, signed bilateral free-trade agreements with China.
Southern Europe needs to enhance its competitiveness and
export
more, and has been criticized (not without justification) for failing to do more along these lines.
But what matters are southern Europe’s costs of production relative to those of Germany, Europe’s
export
champion.
Meanwhile, sectors or firms that export, like those in manufacturing, would enjoy significant reductions in their tax burden.
Disagreement over the BAT extends to business as well, with firms that
export
more than they import supporting it, and vice versa.
After trending down in recent years, South Korean trade since November has shown signs of recovering, notably in terms of
export
growth; and in January, it bounced back significantly.
The
export
portion increased the most – by nearly six-fold, from 6% in 1980 to a pre-crisis peak of 35% in 2007 – as new capacity and infrastructure, low-cost labor, and accession to the World Trade Organization made China the world’s greatest beneficiary of accelerating globalization and surging trade flows.
Europe’s agricultural protectionism also harms developing countries, which are unable to sell their agricultural products – in many cases, the only goods they can
export
– in European markets.
Selling goods for
export
and selling the country to foreign investors is very different.
The time needed to obtain an
export
license fell from an average of 230 days in 2005 to 212 days in 2010.
And just in case there was any sign of flagging, we now have Black Friday, an
export
from the United States, when we are all encouraged to drink deep of the modern Christmas spirit and shop until we drop.
But it is increasingly difficult for the outside world to overlook the impact of the Kingdom’s main export, alongside oil.
China’s current macroeconomic situation shares many similarities with the situation that it faced in 2007 and the best part of 2008, when, owing to strong investment and
export
demand, GDP growth surged significantly beyond its potential.
But genuinely beneficial agricultural reform would need to go further than merely transforming
export
subsidies into other types of subsidies, because many supposedly non-distorting subsidies lead to more output, which hurts producers in developing countries by lowering prices.
With India, we have developed an unprecedented bilateral initiative that will streamline our
export
processes and deepen our defense trade and co-production.
India promised that it would not
export
its weapons technology.
Realizing the threat to the non-proliferation regime, countries as diverse as the Soviet Union, France, Germany, and Japan formed a "Nuclear Suppliers Group" that restrained the
export
of enrichment and reprocessing facilities.
Finally,
export
growth slowed, not primarily because Indian goods suddenly became uncompetitive, but because growth in the country’s traditional
export
markets decelerated.
The April industrial trends survey, conducted by the Confederation of British Industry (of which I am chief economist), showed the strongest rise in manufacturing
export
orders since 2011.
Another option would be to scan, say, the iris of a parrot at point of
export
to ensure that it is not replaced with another parrot.
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