Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
Whether it ultimately can
export
more energy than instability is the key question.
China’s
export
growth is slipping, owing to faltering demand in Europe, which has surpassed the United States as China’s largest foreign market.
So, even with rebalancing, exports will remain a significant determinant of their growth, and China is already their major
export
market.
Intra-regional trade flows have surged during the last decade, but they have been concentrated in parts and components that go into finished products assembled in China for
export
to developed countries.
Confronted with another global slowdown that could depress its
export
markets for years, China needs to boost consumption even as it cools investment.
If these countries imposed tit-for-tat measures on US imports, the US companies that
export
those components would suffer, as would companies that collect royalties on intellectual property used abroad.
Now, these tensions may be reaching a breaking point, after the United States, the European Union, and Japan recently filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization against China’s
export
restrictions on a number of critical minerals, including rare earths.
China’s multitude of
export
taxes and duties has forced Western companies to pay almost twice as much as their Chinese counterparts, creating a powerful incentive for Western manufacturers to set up shop in the Middle Kingdom to gain cheaper access to these indispensable resources.
And, while China’s repeated reduction of
export
quotas for rare earths may not be contrary to WTO rules per se, particularly because the WTO recognizes environmental considerations as a basis for restricting supply (China’s own justification), it remains doubtful whether China’s
export
regime is really in line with the WTO accession protocol to which it agreed.
Were China to open the gates and cast aside its
export
restrictions, effectively flooding the market with rare earths, depressed prices would ruin many mines.
After all, the market has already adapted to some extent to China’s
export
regime.
Last year, a combination of substitution efforts, inventory drawdowns, reduced usage, and illegal Chinese exports meant that up to 8,000 tons of China’s
export
quotas were left unused.
They arguably add little to three prior sanction resolutions that ban the
export
of nuclear and ballistic-missile technology and conventional arms, and that freeze the assets and travel of a handful of Iranian officials.
But the incentive to invest in services would have to be boosted massively, given that the sector is not capital intensive, to offset lower investment in
export
industries.
It would be good for Southern Europe, which needs to
export
more, but can only do so if someone else, like the largest Northern European economy, imports more.
Eventually, however, labor-intensive activities will move to countries at earlier stages of development, while China moves up the value chain, both in the
export
sector and, with rising incomes, in production for domestic consumption.
But the scope of the
export
sector itself will have to expand in order to generate sufficient employment and reduce the external deficit.
It would also mean stable European economies to which we can
export.
We are highly regarded around the world as an excellent
export
base.
Weak global growth is shrinking
export
markets, and many commodity prices are plunging.
But the present-day pencil story would be incomplete without citing China’s state-owned firms, which made the initial investments in technology and labor training; lax forest management policies, which kept wood artificially cheap; generous
export
subsidies; and government intervention in currency markets, which gives Chinese producers a significant cost advantage.
While Spanish exports have increased by 18% since the fourth quarter of 2007, this largely reflects the fact that Spanish
export
prices have risen much less than those of the other large EU countries.
And Spain’s
export
growth has been powered by price-sensitive low-value-added sectors like fuels, foods, and raw materials, not Spanish firms’ movement up the value chain.
The EU is by far the largest
export
market for African goods, and it also offers a home to large communities from almost every African country.
Obama steers clear both of interventions for humanitarian purposes and of attempting to
export
democracy by force.
The crisis has indeed spread to all of Syria’s neighbors – including, most recently, Turkey, which has witnessed the
export
of suicide bombings to what had been the peaceful city of Reyhanli.
Its net
export
position and current-account balance improves.
Without monetary policy, fiscal policy or supply side reforms, how else can Japan return to growth except by a depreciation-driven
export
boom?
Because Japan's
export
sector is so small, barely 10% of GDP, the depreciation would have to be enormous to stoke the entire economy.
But the question remains: What will these countries produce and
export
– besides primary products – to be able to afford the imported cellphones?
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