Exporters
in sentence
429 examples of Exporters in a sentence
This imbalance can have serious costs for labor
exporters.
Labor
exporters
now need to protect their investments in human capital, and a cartel-like political body is the most effective way to do this.
If the countries listed above were to join with China, Mexico, India, and other major labor exporters, they would be holding most of the chips in a collective negotiation about wages, visa terms, and other conditions – some of which would also benefit non-members as global norms changed.
As
exporters
trained their migrant workforces, demand for their labor would grow and spark competition among venders rather than suppliers, thus fueling a virtuous cycle of higher wages and even more skills training.
Because a cartel would make these market changes more discernible, labor
exporters
would be able to respond and adjust their worker-training systems accordingly, increasing labor importers’ ability to recruit migrant workers better suited to the available jobs.
Post-crisis sluggishness in US aggregate demand – especially consumer demand – is likely to persist, denying Chinese
exporters
the support they need from their largest foreign market.
Economists have identified six pitfalls that can afflict natural-resource exporters: commodity-price volatility, crowding out of manufacturing, “Dutch disease” (a booming export industry causes rapid currency appreciation, which undermines other exporters’ competitiveness), inhibited institutional development, civil war, and excessively rapid resource depletion (with insufficient saving).
Oil
exporters
need not be prisoners of a curse that has befallen others.
In the short to medium run, increasing Greek competitiveness requires remedies targeted at specific binding constraints faced by
exporters.
Although the stronger real will help US
exporters
(other things being equal) and hurt those in Brazil, such “casualties of war” are not even collateral damage; rather, they are precisely the point.
If the goal is to stimulate demand for US goods and dampen demand for Brazilian goods, why shouldn’t
exporters
in both countries share in that process, alongside construction and other sectors that are sensitive to interest rates via domestic demand?
For starters, the risk of a hard landing in China poses a serious threat to emerging Asia, commodity
exporters
around the world, and even advanced economies.
Meanwhile, emerging-market commodity
exporters
failed to take advantage of the windfall and implement market-oriented structural reforms in the last decade; on the contrary, many of them embraced state capitalism, giving too large a role to state-owned enterprises and banks.
Exporters
in Europe and Asia have become excessively dependent on selling to the US and other, now-weakened, economies like Spain and the United Kingdom.
India responded to Pakistan’s gesture by supporting its bid for membership of the United Nation’s Security Council, and by withdrawing its objections to the European Union’s grant of special privileges to Pakistani textile
exporters.
Exporters
also travel twice as much as importers.
At the same time, many oil
exporters
are being forced to scale back expenditure plans in the face of sharply falling revenues.
The better-performing emerging markets are those with fewer macroeconomic, policy, and financial weaknesses: South Korea, the Philippines, Malaysia, and other Asian industrial exporters;Poland and the Czech Republic in Europe;Chile, Colombia, Peru, and Mexico in Latin America;Kenya, Rwanda, and a few other economies in Sub-Saharan Africa; and the Gulf oil-exporting countries.
But there is a serious downside: The deal could hurt developing-country exporters, unless the EU and the US make a concerted effort to protect these actors’ interests.
Trump’s belief that US tariffs would act as a tax on Chinese exporters, while creating jobs in America, might have been valid at a time of recession and mass unemployment.
This is because official capital controls oblige
exporters
to deposit hard currencies with the People’s Bank of China in exchange for freshly printed yuan (usually as bank deposits) or government debt.
To be sure, there are important differences between the oil
exporters
and the Asian economies.
As a result, UK
exporters
have been held back from the fast-growing markets of the Commonwealth and the developing world.
China’s decelerating growth had a significant impact on commodity prices, and thus on commodity
exporters
around the world.
Moreover, with the introduction of the euro, Germany had the advantage of pegging its currency to Southern Europe, which was experiencing a housing boom even more extreme than in the US, thus providing German
exporters
with growing markets and little competition.
At the same time, mainland
exporters
stopped selling dollars in the CNY market and turned to the CNH market.
Trump himself has already undercut his national-security claim by exempting most major
exporters
of steel to the US.
Finally, it can expand market access for African exporters, especially by redoubling efforts to complete the Doha round of global trade talks.
Such efforts would help African and American
exporters
alike, including the 120,000 Americans whose jobs are supported by US exports to sub-Saharan Africa.
Though the details vary, primary commodity
exporters
tend to act out the same story, and economic outcomes tend to follow recognizable patterns.
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