Exporters
in sentence
429 examples of Exporters in a sentence
For starters, the region’s commodity exporters, and particularly its oil exporters, were hit hard by the 2014-2016 slump in prices.
Today, eight of the region’s fifteen debt-troubled LICs are commodity
exporters.
First, in resource-intensive countries, especially the region’s eight oil exporters, fiscal consolidation plans must be enacted without delay.
After a long and spectacular “bonanza” in commodity prices since the early 2000s, driven largely by China’s investment boom, many commodity
exporters
found themselves with historically high levels of foreign-exchange reserves.
The US-China trade war may lead to a slight opening up of China’s services markets, implying new opportunities for service
exporters.
And, before the Iran shock had been absorbed, the US threatened a 25% import tariff on cars, which would shave at least $5 billion annually from German exporters’ revenues.
The general lesson from the euro crisis and the US rating downgrade is simple: given that so many countries have chronic excess savings (Germany, Japan, China, oil exporters), the world economy cannot recover without finding ways to channel these excess savings to economies that are both creditworthy and willing to borrow.
This explains the almost continuous stream of measures that emanate from Beijing these days: increased public spending, monetary easing, pressure on state enterprises to expand activity, subsidies to exporters, partial convertibility of the remninbi to spur trade with neighboring countries, and so on.
Second, because most
exporters
also import intermediate inputs that are priced in dollars, exchange-rate fluctuations have a limited impact on their costs and thus on their incentive to change dollar prices.
And, third,
exporters
who wish to preserve their share in world markets – where prices are largely denominated in dollars – choose to keep their dollar prices stable, to avoid falling victim to idiosyncratic exchange-rate movements.
Despite this imbalance, the US dollar’s dominance as an invoicing currency is unlikely to change anytime soon – not least because bringing about a shift would require coordination among a huge number of
exporters
and importers worldwide.
Even if it is, the impact is likely to be different for agricultural
exporters
(the members of Mercosur and some Central American countries) than for
exporters
of minerals and oil (Mexico and other South American countries).
He thinks this will improve the US trade balance, but does not understand that if foreign
exporters
are cut off from the US market, they will not have the dollars to buy US goods.
But even if they don’t, measures that make it harder for foreign
exporters
to earn dollars will create a dollar scarcity, which, in an environment of floating exchange rates, will automatically boost the greenback’s value.
If Chinese authorities had acceded to US demands and allowed the market to determine the exchange rate, the renminbi would have depreciated further still, and US
exporters
would have had a harder time competing.
European leaders are arguing, with some justification, that their
exporters
are paying the price for America’s huge trade imbalance with Asian and oil-exporting countries.
Oil exporters, with the exception of Libya and Yemen, may have avoided major political changes, but the autocratic bargain – and any attempt to unravel it – has become more expensive.
Protectionism merely reduces international trade overall, by making it harder for importers to buy what they need from exporters; it doesn’t change the balance of imports and exports.
A tariff on imports to the US has a much greater impact if Chinese
exporters
are the only ones to encounter it.
Ensuring that the EU does not face the same tariffs as China is particularly significant, because European suppliers are Chinese exporters’ main competitors in many industries.
January marked the 20th anniversary of the North American Free Trade Agreement, the treaty that created a single market with the United States and Canada, and helped to propel Mexico into the top ranks of manufacturing
exporters.
The first – that the issuing country must be among the world’s leading
exporters
– is not an issue: China already is the world’s largest exporter.
Commodity
exporters
like Brazil have struggled more, but not just because of falling natural-resource prices.
Alibaba, Amazon, eBay, Flipkart, and Rakuten are turning millions of small enterprises around the world into “micro-multinational”
exporters.
But different countries have very different interests, depending on whether they are oil
exporters
or importers and how developed their economies are.
Finally, oil
exporters
such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates seek to set aside wealth during the boom years.
Meanwhile, new energy-extraction technologies, combined with a softer trajectory for global growth, are having a marked impact on commodity prices, cutting deeply into the surpluses of commodity
exporters
from Argentina to Saudi Arabia.
It is more than odd to argue that the rest of the world has to cope with a built-in advantage for China’s
exporters
because its authoritarian political system cannot cope with any change.
The IMF’s head, the Spaniard Rodrigo Rato, rightly insists that China, the US, Japan, Europe, and the major oil
exporters
(now the world’s biggest source of new capital) all take concrete steps towards alleviating the risk of a crisis.
Oil
exporters
could, in turn, promise to increase domestic consumption expenditure, which would boost imports.
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