Export
in sentence
1581 examples of Export in a sentence
Disappointing
export
performance is largely responsible for the recent weakening of economic-growth prospects.
In the third quarter of 2013, Germany’s
export
growth slowed and French exports fell.
America’s Suicidal StatecraftSince its victory in the Cold War, America’s global hegemony has rested on three pillars: economic power, military might, and a vast capacity to
export
its popular culture.
America offered Iran on a silver platter strategic assets that Khomeini’s revolution failed to acquire either in eight years of war against Saddam or in its abortive attempts to
export
the Islamic revolution throughout the region.
Countries that managed to leverage globalization, such as China and Vietnam, employed a mixed strategy of
export
promotion and a variety of policies that violate current trade rules.
Rapid
export
growth, together with a drop in imports, enabled Spain to halve its trade deficit last year.
Likewise, now that Warren Buffett is considered to be Obama’s most trusted economic adviser, it is worth recalling that back in 2003 he produced the astonishing prescription that the best way to reduce the US trade deficit was to allow no more imports than it could finance from its
export
earnings.
Beyond the provision of cheap credit and concessional loans is the global
export
of China’s way of doing business.
As a result of the global financial crisis, China’s
export
growth in 2009 dropped by 34% compared to 2008.
The Chinese government must, therefore, strike a balance between protecting China’s
export
sector and preserving its national welfare.
At a time when China is under pressure for manipulating the value of the renminbi to maintain
export
competitiveness, the BRICS framework offers it a platform to expand its currency’s international role.
But its undervalued currency and hidden
export
subsidies have been systematically undermining manufacturing in other BRICS countries, especially India and Brazil.
If declining confidence in US fiscal policy leads to a weaker dollar, Europe and Asia may find it more difficult to export, and if the deficits prove a drag on the American economy, global growth may stall.
Indeed, the US has overtaken China as Japan’s main
export
market, as America’s economy, too, recovers from half-a-decade of sluggishness.
So, when companies from the mainland dealt with each other, they would
export
to Hong Kong first and then import back to the mainland, resulting in the transaction being treated as an
export.
In France’s case, the loss of competitiveness and resulting sharp decline in
export
performance has been aggravated by relying on crushing taxation of labor to finance generous welfare programs and top-drawer public services (a practice exacerbated by stifling labor-market regulation).
And global trade still has not recovered its earlier trajectory: since 2008,
export
volumes have risen at only about half the average annual rate of the pre-crisis period (3.1%, see figure below).
But the inconsistency between rhetoric and reality is long-standing: protectionism expanded under Reagan, including through the imposition of so-called voluntary
export
restraints on Japanese cars.
Europeans are used to thinking of the exchange rate as a critical variable, because they live in very open economies that
export
close to 50% of their total output.
Before the revolution, Libya produced nearly 1.6 million barrels of oil per day, accounting for 96% of the country’s
export
earnings.
It is indeed problematic that US banks and businesses can
export
capital, technology, and jobs as they please, with little or no regard for the domestic costs.
And the textiles industry, recovering from a slowdown caused by the European crisis, is penetrating new
export
markets.
Indeed, Morocco can be proud of its
export
strategy.
These include the United States’ rapid increase in shale-energy production in recent years, and the US government’s decision to end a 40-year crude-oil
export
ban.
What John Connolly's bluntness reflected was America's ability--and willingness--to
export
its economic problems by driving down the dollar's value while scapegoating countries opposed to that strategy.
Growth elsewhere might help America
export
more.
Indeed, many countries that
export
to the US--especially Japan and China--price their goods in dollars.
Clearly, industrialization and
export
expansion alone cannot absorb China’s massive labor force.
Moreover, the bias toward manufacturing and
export
industries leads to a severe misallocation of capital.
It used to be that if you wanted to
export
a shirt, you had to be able to design it to the taste of people you didn’t really know, procure the appropriate materials, manufacture it, distribute it through an effective logistical network, brand it, market it, and sell it.
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