Exporters
in sentence
429 examples of Exporters in a sentence
There are lessons in this experience for other natural-resource
exporters.
Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao has stressed that China does not want more rapid appreciation of the renminbi, because of the potential adverse impact on Chinese
exporters.
In the meantime, the rise of the euro against the dollar creates substantial European pain for manufacturing
exporters.
The balance depends on the poverty profile of individual countries and on whether they are food
exporters
or importers.
Some large middle-income food
exporters
(such as Brazil and Argentina) would also reap gains.
The Republican Party, now in control of the legislative and executive branches, views a BAT – which would effectively subsidize US exporters, by giving them tax breaks, while penalizing US companies that import goods – as an important element of corporate-tax reform.
The Chinese slowdown, in turn, will have spillover effects on other countries, especially commodity
exporters.
And the dollar has appreciated against most currencies, undercutting US exporters’ competitiveness, again in line with theory.
Trade makes
exporters
stronger, more efficient, and more productive.
With Asian manufacturing
exporters
penetrating markets worldwide, such a development would be highly damaging to Latin America’s growth prospects.
The weaker exchange rate has helped UK-based exporters’ competitiveness.
Moreover, trade in agricultural products will benefit US
exporters
more than Central American farmers.
With the EU accounting for half of British trade turnover, the impact on
exporters
could be devastating (despite a more competitive exchange rate).
Peru and Chile, by contrast, are natural-resource
exporters
that derived huge benefits from the China-driven commodity boom of the last decade.
The rich countries, together with China and the Middle East oil
exporters
do indeed need to take bold steps to help out emerging markets, and the Fund has a useful role to play.
Many emerging-country exporters, struggling to retain customers in the wobbly US and European markets, feel otherwise.
Higher oil prices mean that Americans (and Europeans and Japanese) are paying hundreds of millions of dollars to Middle East oil dictators and oil
exporters
elsewhere in the world rather than spending it at home.
Specific goals should include improved gender wage equality and a better balance between agricultural exporters’ prosperity and that of agricultural workers, many of whom are indigenous.
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.
But with a fixed-quota arrangement, there would be no competition among South Korean steel
exporters
in the US market.
Based on past experience with quotas around the world, the predictable result would be reduced quality control and longer delivery times, because
exporters
would have no reason to compete for new customers.
How much further they go may well be influenced in part by domestic conditions and in part by the extent to which weaker growth in China exacerbates downside risks in Asian economies, commodity exporters, and the US and the eurozone.
Given that the US remains a vital market for most exporters, such an initiative will have clout.
In a sensible global decarbonization plan, many of today’s fossil-fuel exporting countries and companies will become tomorrow’s
exporters
of zero-carbon energy.
Especially in times of crisis – and a sharp fall in US imports would imply a much more severe crisis for Asian and European
exporters
than it would for the US – the dollar is a currency that you run to, not from.
A sharp slowdown in China would have negative spillover effects on manufacturing
exporters
like Korea and Taiwan and commodity
exporters
like Brazil and South Africa.
With the return of Iran, Libya, and Iraq as major oil exporters, low oil prices must surely be both inevitable and enduring.
The savings generated in East Asia and the major oil
exporters
have increased global liquidity, helping to finance the US current account deficit, which has now reached unprecedented levels.
This would require, for instance, stimulating growth in Europe, Asia, and the major oil
exporters
in order to offset the contractionary effect on the world economy of adjustment in the US, which should include more restrictive fiscal policies, less private consumption, and higher domestic savings to reduce its external deficit.
So far, China has looked to external markets so that
exporters
can achieve the economies of scale needed to improve quality and move up the value chain.
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