Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
Unfortunately, with a large
export
sector that employs scores of millions of workers, this dependence has become structural, which implies that to reduce China’s trade dependency and trade surplus is much more than a matter of adjusting macroeconomic policy.
In April, the US banned the sale of such chips to the Chinese telecom giant ZTE as punishment for the company’s violations of US
export
rules.
With China now America’s third largest – and by far its most rapidly growing –
export
market, the US should push hard to expand business opportunities in China, especially as the Chinese economy tilts increasingly toward internal demand.
The third factor undermining the RMB is that China has exhausted its
export
potential.
In the last two decades, Mexico has managed to diversify its
export
base and is now a major supplier of industrial goods to the US and Canada.
High oil prices have created huge
export
revenues for Middle Eastern governments, which still want to park their earnings in American assets.
While the oil market is the largest determinant of Russia’s near-term economic prospects, accounting as it does for half of
export
revenues, long-term growth requires Russia to re-enter international capital markets, attract foreign investment (and stem capital flight), and reintegrate with the global economy.
In China’s case, it certainly allowed domestically based firms to
export
more, but only because they were selling at below-cost prices, thus incurring losses.
In addition, the fall in
export
demand would have automatically caused the franc’s value to decline relative to other currencies, with lower interest rates producing a further decline.
Loss of
export
competitiveness as a result of excessively strong currencies is not the only problem.
Furthermore, EU
export
subsidies for agricultural products will be abolished from 2013.
Coal is also a massive
export
earner, bringing in roughly $2,000 per citizen annually.
Next, suppose that the price of the natural resource that is the country’s largest
export
suddenly dips sharply (as has happened recently).
The initial
export
shock was likely to reduce growth.
Trump’s Protectionist Rube Goldberg MachineWASHINGTON, DC – To avoid the Trump administration’s 25% tariff on imported steel, some countries have agreed to accept
export
quotas on 59 varieties of steel products.
Beyond the obvious fallout from tariffs, the introduction of
export
quotas and exemptions will also have an insidious impact.
If this system of
export
licensing operates on a first-come, first-served basis, then US importers and South Korean exporters will be left with no choice but to rush out their orders early in the year.
Rather than remaking the world in its image, the EU fears neighbors that
export
chaos rather than import values.
Meanwhile, the benefits in terms of competitiveness will be very limited, owing to the country’s narrow
export
base, and will evaporate in a vicious circle of devaluations and rising interest rates.
As they build up their
export
potential and seek expanding markets, east Europeans become disillusioned with Europe's economic sclerosis.
Because interest rates must remain very low in developed countries at least for the next several years, there are now strong incentives to
export
capital to higher-yielding emerging economies.
Yet Germany’s
export
companies are undeniably very competitive, and have largely managed to increase their global market share since the 1990s.
Beyond oil and gas, Russia’s arms
export
agency, Rosoboronexport, has just seized Avtovaz, the giant dysfunctional Soviet car factory, and VSMPO-Avisma, Russia’s big titanium company, while all aircraft production has been concentrated in one state company.
Finally, after welcoming foreign investment, which contributed greatly to Chinese manufacturing growth and
export
competitiveness, some in China would now tighten restrictions on foreign investment to protect China’s domestic industries.
To offset falling
export
demand in the wake of the global financial crisis, the government unleashed an enormous wave of investment in railways, urban infrastructure, and property.
The oil-producing Gulf countries should
export
solar energy from the vast Arabian Desert to both Europe and Asia.
Coal-producing Australia should
export
solar power from the enormous outback to Southeast Asia via submarine cable.
Canada should increase its exports of zero-carbon hydropower to the US market and finally end its efforts to
export
products from its high-carbon oil sands.
Old models of economic growth, however, such as
export
orientation and selective use of import restrictions that worked well for East Asia in the last century, are less feasible under today's global trade rules.
Using a GET FiT-type structure to underpin the early financing of initiatives such as DESERTEC, a large-scale program to generate solar and wind power in the Sahara desert for use in North Africa and
export
to Europe, holds particular promise.
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