Exporters
in sentence
429 examples of Exporters in a sentence
But the most pressing goal must be for Britain to decide what kinds of farms and food it wants to develop, and then to protect their interests in its deals with the world’s major exporters, with which it is attempting to conclude free-trade agreements.
Anti-dumping action against imports from China, Vietnam, and other Asian
exporters
is already commonplace in developing countries.
If
exporters
from Brazil, Turkey, South Africa, and Mexico – all deficit economies – were already struggling to compete with China in third markets when those markets were wide open and expanding rapidly, imagine how they will fare under less hospitable conditions.
Indeed, if oil were truly America’s only or paramount interest in the Middle East, its special relationship with Israel would be mystifying, given the harm that it implies for US interests among Arab oil
exporters.
The US will remain concerned about ensuring the security of energy supplies for its Asian allies, which, like China, are increasingly dependent on the region’s oil
exporters.
Happily for world exporters, the same binge mentality that makes a whopping two-thirds of Americans either overweight or obese seems to extend to all their purchasing habits.
That is a serious concern, occupying finance ministries, central banks, trading desks, and importers and
exporters
worldwide.
Although Saudi Arabia and several of the Gulf states are also major oil exporters, they differ from other producers in two important ways.
Third, German
exporters
are likely to suffer.
CAMBRIDGE – Oil prices have plummeted 40% since June – good news for oil-importing countries, but bad news for Russia, Venezuela, Nigeria, and other oil
exporters.
Major Vietnamese
exporters
of seafood and steel have already been hit with new US tariffs,and additional sectors, such as textiles, could be next.
Similarly, it is extremely unlikely that the new crop of manufacturing exporters, such as Vietnam and Cambodia, will ever reach the levels of industrialization attained by the early industrializers, such as Britain and Germany.
On the contrary, oil scarcity is less of a concern today than ever before, owing not only to energy-efficiency initiatives, like the European Union’s nearly zero-energy buildings policy, but also to rising competition between shale producers and traditional oil
exporters.
On the other side of the continent, Kenya and Uganda are watching their hopes of becoming oil
exporters
evaporate.
Although under constant political attack, the BBC acts exactly as a public partner should, undertaking research and development, setting technical standards, providing skills training, and adhering to open procurement from small and medium-size suppliers, which are among the UK’s most successful producers and
exporters.
Even more relevant, the decline of the renminbi and other currencies in the past year has had very little impact on US import prices, because Chinese and other
exporters
price their goods in dollars and do not adjust them when the exchange rate changes.
To illustrate this dynamic, consider how the region’s soybean
exporters
have managed production in recent years.
Exporters
of light sweet crude – such as Algeria, Angola, and Nigeria – lost nearly all of their market share in the US, while
exporters
of sour or heavier crude, including Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, have lost little.
While currency depreciation has created opportunities for Japanese exporters, the combination of increasing import costs and rising interest rates creates a weak incentive for domestic investment and capital formation.
A weak currency reduces household purchasing power by making imports expensive, thereby protecting import-competing SOEs and boosting exporters’ profits.
But the fact remains that, if Trump’s heated protectionist rhetoric continues, the US will face a strong dollar, severely weakened exporters, and a much larger trade deficit – not to mention heightened tensions with a formidable China.
Britain’s
exporters
are also unhappy because half of their sales are to fellow EU members.
Except for a handful of exporters, developing economies have been experiencing premature deindustrialization.
During China’s infrastructure boom, it was importing huge volumes of commodities, pushing up their prices and, in turn, growth in the world’s commodity exporters, including large emerging economies like Brazil.
Commodity
exporters
like Russia and Saudi Arabia, which ran large current-account surpluses when oil prices were high, are the main exception to this pattern of diverging foreign-asset positions.
Venezuela had become a magnificent business opportunity for Colombian
exporters.
They could establish trust between
exporters
and importers because they could punish opportunistic behaviors.
Exporters
and importers no longer need to know one another, because they can write a contract that a court will enforce.
Today, with many developing countries, including a majority of the countries in the Middle East, serving as some of the world’s main labor exporters, might it be time to consider the formation of an OPEC-like cartel for migrant workers?
Rich labor-importing countries and poor labor-exporting countries have a mutually dependent relationship; but labor importers can unilaterally tighten or loosen immigration or labor-market regulations, leaving
exporters
in a constant state of uncertainty.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Countries
Would
Other
Prices
Commodity
Market
Which
Markets
Trade
World
Major
Could
Global
Currency
Importers
Growth
Economies
Dollar
Goods